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Compartment syndrome is no joke. Losing a limb is absolutely possible, as are such wonderful complications as rhabdomyolysis and kidney failure. You're often lucky "just" to end up with a fasciotomy scar.
I'm surprised that CNN didn't get O'Brien out of the Philippines for the fasciotomy attempt. Sure, any surgery anywhere can have bad results, but an organization like that should do the best it can rather than rolling the dice with the locals. I wouldn't have recommended flying back to the USA, but at some point in the couple of days between the injury and the surgery, he could have flown to world-class health care in Singapore. It sounds as if they sort of left it up to him, which reflects quite poorly on the organization. There are people in CNN HR who are paid to deal with this kind of thing.

Of course, I say this as someone who waited a week to get an X-ray of my broken arm. Fortunately the only treatment indicated for my particular break is "stop using your arm", which I had already done. b^)

Isn't the Philippines one of those medical tourism countries? He probably wasn't any worse off staying where he was than going somewhere else.
I'm sure this premise is correct, but it does not imply this conclusion.
It's not like it's some backwater hellhole; it's the 53rd state after DC and Puerto Rico.
There wouldn't have been time. Compartment syndrome is a medical emergency.
A polite request to HN moderators -- When you change an article title I think a comment mentioning that fact and documenting the original title would be a good idea.

Current title: Miles O'Brien: My life, lost and found (the CNN article title)

Original submission title: CNN contributor Miles O'Brien on recovering after losing an arm

I'm not saying mods shouldn't change titles sometimes. Just that doing it silently doesn't seem to really fit in with the HN ethos.

Am I the only one that thought this was a Star Trek TNG reference?