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The car pulled up to the house of Dr. Nijaz D?ani?, an experienced internist who had turned his home into a hospital and was treating patients with materials someone smuggled out of the hospital pharmacy. The forty-two-year-old doctor had never left Srebrenica, not even when Serbs held the town the first three weeks of the war. Nijaz stayedbehind to care for his ailing parents. He had long commanded respectâperhaps that is why Serbs spared his house when they torched those of his neighbors. After a group of Muslim men set an ambush that killed the leader of the local Serb forces on May 7, nearly all Serbs, armed and civilian, abandoned Srebrenica the following day. Since then, some of the Muslims who had taken to the woods for safety ventured back to the southern parts of town. IN THE OPERATING ROOM, Nedret makes a last-ditch effort to save the life of another man with a destroyed leg who has nearly bled out before getting here. What the patient needs most is impossible in Srebrenica: a blood transfusion to improve his circulation and deliver oxygen to important tissues. While blood transfusions were pioneered back in World War I to combat the second major cause of death for amputeesâblood lossâSrebrenica still has no working laboratory, no reagents to check blood type, no bags for blood storage, and no stable sources of electricity to keep blood cold. Itâs hard to kill someone with ketamine. Even if a doctor or nurse mistakenly administers ten times the therapeutic dose, the patient usually just has a good, long sleep.* * * I tried, but my facial muscles were so weak that no smile came. She wrote downâhypo-aroused,â a medical term for lethargic, and also noted that I was not fully alert. When I did talk, the words came out without any emotional register.
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