BIRMINGHAM (UK), Oct 15: A Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the
Taliban has every chance of making a `good recovery`, British doctors
said on Monday as 14year-old Malala Yousufzai arrived at a hospital in
central England for treatment of her severe wounds.
Malala, who
was shot for advocating education for girls, was flown from Pakistan to
receive specialist treatment at Birmingham`s Queen Elizabeth Hospital at
a unit expert in dealing with complex trauma cases that has treated
hundreds of soldiers wounded in Afghanistan.
`Doctors...believe
she has a chance of making a good recovery on every level,` said Dr Dave
Rosser, the hospital`s medical director, adding that her treatment and
rehabilitation could take months.
He told reporters Malala had
not yet been assessed by British medics but said she would not have been
brought to Britain at all if her prognosis was not good.
TV
footage showed a patient, believed to be the schoolgirl, being rushed
from an ambulance into the hospital surrounded by a large team of
medical staff.
She will now undergo scans to reveal the extent of
her injuries, but Rosser said they could not provide any further
details without her agreement.
Pakistani surgeons removed a
bullet from near her spinal cord during a three-hour operation the day
after the attack last week, but she now needs intensive specialist
follow-up care.
The unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, a large
blue and white glass-plated complex in the south of England`s second
city, has treated every British battle casualty for the last decade,
Rosser said.
Built at a cost of 545 million pounds ($877
million), the hospital has the world`s largest single-floor critical
care unit for patients with gunshot wounds, burns, spinal damage and
major head injuries.
Treatment for Malala is likely to include repairing damaged bones in her skull and complex follow-up neurological treatment.
`Injuries
to bones in the skull can be treated very successfully by the
neurosurgeons and the plastic surgeons, but it is the damage to the
blood supply to the brain that will determine long-term disability,`
said Duncan Bew, consultanttrauma surgeon at Barts Health NHS Trust in
London.
Judging the best way forward in such difficult cases requires a wide range of experienced medics working as a team.
`In
trauma, it is really the coordinated impact of intensive care that is
critical. It`s not just about keeping the patient alive but also
maximising their rehabilitation potential. With neurological injuries
that is paramount,` Bew said.
Doctors said youth was on her side
since a young brain has more ability to recover from injury than a
mature one.`On the positive side, Malala has passed two major hurdles
the removal of the bullet and the very critical 48-hour window after
surgery,` said Anders Cohen, head of neurosurgery at the Brooklyn
Hospital Centre in New York.
Compared with some of the nation`s
ageing hospitals, the new National Health Service (NHS) hospital offers a
spectrum of services ranging from plastic surgery to neuroscience.
They may all be needed in Malala`s case.
The
hospital and government officials declined to give any details about
the security measuresthat would be put in place to protect the girl but a
spokesman for the interior ministry said her security was `a priority
for both Pakistan and the UK`.
A hospital spokesman said no extra
measures were in place but because the unit treated British military
personnel it already had `fairly robust security Care of soldiers on the
battlefield has improved dramatically in recent years, so that many now
survive injuries that would have been a death sentence in the past.
As
a result, Birmingham now handles extremely challenging injuries that
were previously littleknown and has built up enormous experience in head
and brain injuries, multiple fractures and amputations.
Malala
did not come from Pakistan with any of her relatives but the Pakistani
Consulate is providing support and her family may join her at a later
date.
Malala, a cheerful schoolgirl who had wanted to become a
doctor before agreeing to her father`s wishes that she strive to be a
politician, has become a potent symbol of resistance against the
Taliban`s efforts to deprive girls of an education.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the `barbaric`attack on Malala had `shocked Pakistan and the world`.
`Malala will now receive specialist medical care in an NHS hospital,` he said.
`The
public revulsion and condemnation of this cowardly attack shows that
the people of Pakistan will not be beaten by terrorists.
Security
concerns meant Malala`s departure after daybreak from Islamabad Airport
in an air ambulance provided by the United Arab Emirates was not
announced until the plane was airborne. She was accompanied on the plane
by an intensive care specialist.-Agencies
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