Thank you very much for your comments about the medics and their tremendous sacrifice. Reading their citations for some of their valour declarations is breathtaking: their bravery, their courage, and their sacrifice.... Thank you very much for that.
It was a very complicated thing to run that Role 3 hospital, because it's the first time NATO has run a multinational hospital in a combat zone, with mass casualties coming in almost daily. There were many obstacles to overcome with respect to differences in national standards, credentials, and cultural differences in the types of different scopes of practice for different health occupations, and to coordinate them into a smoothly running team, particularly with trauma teams and in the operating room.
Generally, it went very well, particularly with allies who share the same common types of medical practice in their home countries, like the British, the Americans, the Australians, and the New Zealanders. Things evolve progressively. The biggest challenge was that the vast majority of the casualties treated were not NATO casualties. The original mandate to be there was to treat NATO casualties, coalition casualties. The majority, about 80%, were Afghans, and Afghan civilians, mostly. That was a difficult thing that we weren't entirely ready for right at the start. We had to react to it fairly quickly.
The medical rules of eligibility for care in the NATO hospital change, depending on the senior leadership of NATO and the political drivers. For us to take on more and more care of civilians, including children.... Military hospitals, except in humanitarian assistance missions, typically aren't structured to deal with large numbers of casualties. They're designed to have a minimal medical footprint on the ground and a very efficient medical evacuation so that we get people, give them the stabilization care necessary in surgery, and get them to a hospital with greater capabilities in a more secure zone.
Equipping is based on that: equipping in equipment, capability, and clinical skills. With the Afghan population, we could not medically evacuate them to other countries. There were sometimes some very difficult ethical situations faced by our clinicians in having to do the best they could with Afghan casualties, particularly children.
On the other hand, if we were to establish a full-up pediatric centre of excellence, say, we would essentially positively harm Afghanistan's development of a pediatric capability in their own region, because we would basically put all of their clinicians out of business for the entire local population. That was a big challenge.
As for mental health-related lessons learned, I'll ask Colonel Heber to mention this.