A pediatric medical director told Newsweek that Ukraine keeping its territory is the only way for the war to end.
That is what Dr. Zoranya Ivanyuk, deputy director of Saint Nicholas Pediatric Hospital in Lviv, Ukraine, teaches her daughter, 12, and son, 6, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022.that when the war began, it was unexpected and"a shock" to everyone, causing chaos that citizens nationwide immediately had to grapple with and take on.
"[In] my opinion, he could do a lot of things here, even in the sense of teaching soldiers first aid, for example, or trying to do some courses," Ivanyuk said."But he refused because he preferred to go there and stay there and do all he could do there.Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen during an event marking the 100th anniversary of domestic civil aviation at the State Kremlin Palace, on February 9 in Moscow.
Formerly a worker in the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit, in addition to being an experienced pediatric anesthesiologist, she became a medical director within the past year. She and the pediatric wing's 800 employees see children coming into the hospital every day either having been injured in the war or needing care for chronic diseases or emergency surgeries.
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