
Episode # 637 • 24 Apr 2026
Navigating Healthcare & Surgery in Conflict Areas
Vascular trauma care looks a lot different when the OR is improvised, supplies are limited, and limb salvage decisions cannot wait. On this episode of the BackTable Podcast, host Dr. Sabeen Dhand interviews vascular surgeon Dr. Ahmad Hussain, a Southern California private-practice “hired gun” who volunteered on a WHO/UN-coordinated humanitarian mission to Gaza after an orthopedic colleague requested vascular surgeons due to widespread limb loss.
Timestamps
00:00 - Introduction
04:02 - Why Volunteer In Gaza?
07:41 - Logistics and Crossing Into Gaza
10:45 - Hospital as Refugee Camp
13:34 - First Vascular Trauma Case
18:24 - Mass Casualty Triage
23:20 - Kids Guiding Doctors
27:09 - Evacuation Uncertainty
32:03 - Would You Go Back?
37:55 - How to Volunteer
39:30 - Show Wrap Up and Credits
Resources
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More about this episode
Dr. Hussain describes entering through the Rafah border with suitcases of medical supplies, working in a hospital functioning as a refugee camp for tens of thousands, and treating shrapnel-related vascular trauma with limited imaging (mainly ultrasound and X-ray), scarce anesthesia, and minimal surgical resources, relying heavily on skilled local medical students and residents. He recounts mass-casualty triage, the emotional impact of caring for injured children, bonding with the children who assisted the volunteers, and the dangerous, militarized evacuation via Israel with U.S. embassy assistance. He says he wants to return, but notes tightened restrictions and dwindling aid, and he recommends other organizations, noting any specialty of medical professionals should consider volunteering.
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