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The Hippocratic Oath of a Syrian-Armenian Doctor

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  • The Hippocratic Oath of a Syrian-Armenian Doctor

    The Hippocratic Oath of a Syrian-Armenian Doctor

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/04/18/hippocratic-oath-syrian-armenian-doctor/
    By Sarkis Balkhian on April 18, 2014

    Special for the Armenian Weekly

    `After March 2011, it was clear that Syria was no longer an option,'
    said Dr. Karnig Jozigian, as we sat down for coffee in Stepanakert.

    The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that at
    least 50 percent of hospitals in Syria have been destroyed or severely
    damaged, while more than 15,000 physicians have fled the conflict and
    found refuge elsewhere.

    Karnig Jozigian inspecting the medicine donated by the ARF's Help Your
    Brother Initiative.

    While Jozigian is not practicing medicine in the ghost city of Aleppo,
    he is adhering to the Hippocratic Oath by serving the people of
    another conflict zone: Artsakh (Nagorno Karabagh Republic).

    In 2001, he went to Armenia to study medicine at the Yerevan State
    Medical University. After completing six years of education and two
    years of medical residency in the field of internal medicine, he
    briefly returned to Aleppo and completed a three-month medical
    training program there.

    At that time, the medical sector in Syria had far more to offer than
    the one in Armenia. Nonetheless, guided by an inherent sense of
    obligation to serve the Armenian nation, and his profound love for
    Datevig, he returned to Armenia. Jozigian had met Datevig, a pianist
    from Dilijan, while they were both university students in Yerevan. By
    2011, the couple was married and living in Dilijan, where Jozigian
    worked at the newly-established Dilijan Medical Center.

    `In the summer of 2012, when Syrian Armenians started migrating to
    Armenia, the Republic of Armenia government announced that doctors
    were needed in the Independent State of Artsakh,' he said. `After
    receiving positive feedback from the [Armenian] Ministry of Diaspora,
    I visited Artsakh for the first time in my life.' During this scouting
    mission, he met with officials from the Ministry of Health in
    Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, as well as with the local
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) leaders. He was informed that
    doctors were needed in three primary locations: Lachin, Kalbajar, and
    Vank.

    `It was love at first sight. The second I saw the mountains of
    Artsakh, I knew I wanted to live here,' Jozigian said.

    He and his wife have been living in Vank (near the Kantsasar
    Monastery) for the past nine months. For the time being, they are
    living in one of the rooms in the hospital, while they wait to receive
    funds from the state to renovate their government-designated home.
    With assistance from the government, Datevig found a job as a piano
    instructor at the local school of art.

    `The medical sector in Artsakh is dreadful. The vast majority of the
    doctors who return from Yerevan with a medical degree choose to
    practice in Stepanakert rather than in their own villages,' he said.
    `I am the only doctor in Vank and the surrounding six villages. The
    hospital has a staff of 20 consisting of 14 nurses, ambulance drivers,
    accountants, and janitors.'

    The fixed income for doctors in Artsakh is 156,000 AMD (roughly
    $375US; however, visiting doctors receive an extra percentage
    (determined by their location of residency). For example, a visiting
    doctor receives an additional 40 percent in Stepanakert, 60 percent in
    Vank, and 80 percent in Lachin and Kalbajar. In the past year, around
    7,200 people have visited the hospital in Vank. Around 10 percent of
    the patients were transferred to Stepanakert to receive the proper
    medical care.

    `Our hospital lacks the proper infrastructure to provide full-scale
    medical care to our patients,' he explained. `The hospital has a
    laboratory for blood tests, but we do not have an X-ray device or an
    ultrasound machine. Even our ambulance is in abysmal condition.'
    Several months ago, the ARF's Help Your Brother initiative sent
    $15,000 worth of medicine and medical supplies to the hospital in
    Vank. That supply of medicine is still being used to treat patients at
    Jozigian's hospital. Over the past nine months, Jozigian has found
    himself in numerous emergency situations where he's had to conduct
    operations and provide services that are not usually available due to
    the lack of infrastructure and equipment in Vank.

    `Traditionally we do not deliver babies at the Vank Hospital. We refer
    those cases to Stepanakert,' he said. `But in the past nine months, I
    have had to deliver three healthy babies at our hospital, because they
    were emergency cases.' Despite the challenges, Dr. Karnig Jozigian
    affirms his commitment to serving his nation in Artsakh. `I probably
    would make a lot more money if I worked in Yerevan,' he said. `But I
    prefer the lifestyle here in Artsakh. I will do everything I can to
    remain here. I might even invest in farming.' Two other
    Syrian-Armenian doctors and one dentist have moved to Artsakh in the
    past year. `Aleppo is my birthplace. I have a lot of memories there. I
    love Syria,' he said. `But Armenia and Artsakh is my homeland. I am
    still adhering to the Hippocratic Oath by serving the people in
    Artsakh.'



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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