we want to identify preliminary injury patterns. and interview survivors as well as conduct cabin crew interviews. we ll look at the slides, the deployment, their use and performance in thisser eir sequ and whether child safety seats were used. when we talk about the airport, i know we have the experts with respect to airport operations behind us, but i ll just give you a brief thumbnail of what we are looking at when we re looking at runway 28 left and san francisco. there are about 1,200 operations per day, three quarters of those are commercial operations. there are two sets of intersecting runways. runways 119, left and right. and runways 10, 28 left and right.
injury patterns, interview survivors as well as conduct cabin crew interviews. we are going to evaluate the use of the slides, their deployment, their use and their performance in this sequence and we are going to be documenting occupant restraint use and also whether child safety seats were used. we talk about the airport i know we have the experts. with respect to airport operations behind us i will give you a brief thumbnail of what we are looking at when we are looking at run way 28 left in san francisco. there are about 1,200 operations per day, three quarters of those are commercial operations. there are two sets of intersecting run ways. run ways 119 left and right and run ways 1028 left and right.
well, i think that would be kind of difficult for me to comment on. if i just remain in the medical field, i don t think the injury patterns are very different from what we ve seen in the past having read journals and what surgeons in the past wars have had to take care of. certainly blast injuries are nothing new. i think the thing that s different in this war is our ability to save these individuals on the front line by getting medical assets so far forward that soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines who might not have survived on the battlefield before are able to get to us. i have to say any time i speak about that, my hats off to the medical corpsmen on the front line, because they re the ones that are trained so well that they re getting patients back to us that we never would have seen in the past. they make our job difficult, but we re glad they do. how will the fallen be honored tomorrow at brook? tomorrow, actually, it s
in 1998 in which a number of patients were injured. we had to call in a number of people from home to help deal with this afterhours. ouror paidic surgeons have been literally op right throughout the clock. we had spinal cord injury, chest injuries many required being on a ventilator. and we had a number of injuries that my trauma surgery colleagues have operated on to address the problems. the house is collapsing, is that a best metaphor for the harm done to these people and what happens in the context of thf disast per. i think the injury patterns we ve seen in these patients is