Aber 8, 1918 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS _Hagen David Adorn Plans Expanded Medical Services TEL AVIV — Early in October construction will begin on the site of the new MDA Israel National Blood Center in Tel Aviv. This, the newest and most ambitious addition to the life-saving projects' of Magen David Adorn in Is- rael, will be built on a 31/2 acre site close to airport facilities and to the network of highways that connect Tel Aviv with Jerusalem, Haifa, and other major cities. On completion, the $10,000,000 complex will include a fully equipped modern blood donor center, laboratories for research, a communications and com- puter center to facilitate and upgrade the collection and distribution of blood to hospitals and first aid sta- tions throughout the coun- try, and a system of under- ground missile and bomb- proof facilities for the proc- essing, fractionation, and storage of blood. Planning for the new MDA blood center began immediately after the Yom Kippur War in 1973, when Israeli officials be- Came convinced that existing facilities were inadequate for the future" needs of the population. Prof. Bracha Ramot, world renowned hematologist and head of the MDA Blood Services Program, estimates that the need for blood — dramati- cally demonstrated this year in the terrorist assault on the Tel Aviv-Haifa road, when MDA had to provide, almost instantaneously,• over 300 pints of blood to civilians and soldiers — will be tripled in the next ten years. "One cannot estimate," says Prof. Ramot, "literally, how many thousands of additional lives will be saved in the future because of the construction of our new Blood Center." MDA's Blood Services have steadily widened the scope and sophistication of their activities for the bene- fit of all of the inhabitants of Israel. These activities are carried out by three bodies: the Blood Recruitment Di- vision which is in charge of the nationwide blood insur- ance program; the Central Blood Bank; and the Col. David Marcus Fractiona- tion Institute. Some 125,000 units of fresh blood were col- lected by Magen David Adom in 1977 - about 80 percent of the total blood needs of the country (the other 20 percent were col- lected by local hospitals), and 100 percent of the needs of the Israel De- fense Forces. The fresh blood, brought to the Central Blood Bank by refrigerated blood- mobiles, is stored at a tem- perature of 4°C, is then sorted for blood groups and Rh factor and is tested and screened to ensure that it does not carry diseases. The _Central Blood Bank supplies fresh blood and components to the country's hospitals and to the Israel Defense Forces in accord- ance with their daily needs, and stockpiles blood for emergencies. Another important task of the Central Blood Bank is the separation, by centrifu- gation, of fresh blood into thrOmbocytes, cryoprecipi- tate and plasma. Thrombo- cytes are needed in the treatment of/ victims of leukemia and cancer and for patients undergoing heart surgery. Leukemia, once consid- ered an invariably fatal dis- ease, can now be halted in certain cases, and indis- pensable components of the supportive therapy are the thrombocytes which MDA's Central Blood Bank sepa- rates and supplies. Cryoprecipitate — the matter that effects crust- ing — is truly a lifesaver for the more than 200 hemophiliacs in the country. It must be sepa- rated from fresh blood very shortly after collec- tion. At present some 1,500 units of thrombocytes and 2,000 units of cryoprecipi- tate are processed monthly at the Central Blood Bank. But growing demands re- quire a considerable expan- sion of production. This will be effected at the new Blood Services Center. A new activity of the Cen- tral Blood Bank is the proc- essing of leucocytes — the corpuscles of the blood needed to fight infection — through leucophoresis. To cope with unforeseen emergencies, blood of rare type is frozen at the Bank at -80°C for long-term storage. At present, some 15 lab- oratory technicians are at work at the Central Blood Bank, under the guidance of Dr. Shulamit Bar-Shany, the Bank's medical director. After moving into the new Blood Services Center, the staff is to be doubled, to meet the increasing needs and demands of the growth of population and the ad- vances of medicine. Fresh blood has an ef- Processing of gammaglobulin at Magen David Adom's Col. David Marcus Fractionation Institute. An artist's drawing of the new Magen David Adom Blood Services Cent€ The annual dinner of tne ficacy span of 21 days. to defray a major part of the Michigan Region of the The plasma from out- building costs; Friends-of- dated blood that has lost MDA Societies on four con- American Red Magen David its efficacy, is transferred tinents will contribute the for Israel will be held Sept. 17 at Cong. Bnai Moshe. to the Col. David Marcus balance. Fractionation Institute. Here protein components for therapeutic use are fractionated from the plasma, in large quan- The groundbreaking reaching humanitarian tities and on an industrial ceremonies of the New programs of Magen David scale. Magen David Adom (MDA) Adorn, Israel's Emergency Working under difficult Israel National Blood Cen- Medical Service and for her conditions in crammed ter, scheduled to take place tireless efforts on behalf of quarters, the staff of 15 on Oct. 22, will be attended the gallant Jewish activists technicians, chemists and by top Israeli government in the Soviet Union." She has been active in pharmacists, headed by officials, a delegation of Haim Dagan, director of the American Red Magen several programs on behalf institute, process solutions David for Israel (ARMDI) of Soviet Jewry and has of normal serum albumin leaders, representatives been vice chairman of the and immune serum globu- from the Israel Defense Detroit Committee for Forces, Civil Defense, Soviet Jewry for a number lin. Police and health-related of years. Albumin is vitally impor- agencies who work closely Philip Slomovitz, editor tant for patients suffering with Magen David Adom on and publisher of The Jewish from shock and in all cases a day-to-day basis. News, will be guest speaker, where the patient's body does not produce it in suffi- cient quantities. It is an im- portant healing agent in se- vere burns and scalds. The normal serum albumin pro- duced by the Institute is supplied directly to the hos- pitals. Testimonial to Rae Sharfman Tied to MDA's Blood Center The gammaglobulin is an important prophylactic against hepatitis. When an outbreak of jaundice occurs among a group of young people, for instance, the entire group is given injec- tions of the globulin. The gammaglobulin produced by the institute is supplied to hospitals, Sick Fund clinics and pharmacies. The pro- ceeds from the sale of the products help cover part of the institute's opera- tional budget. The institute's new quar- ters at the Blood Services Center to be built will make feasible automation and re- search. Among the products that Haim Dagan hopes to produce is hyperimmune globulin of various kinds. The new Blood Services Center will enable Magen David Adorn to greatly ex- pand and modernize the work of its blood services. It will enable MDA to stock blood reserves and to con- duct an intensified program of applied research in coop- eration with institutions of medicine and science. The building of the center — MDA's most ambitious project to date — is to be a multi-national project in which MDA societies the world over take part. American Red Magen David for Israel has pledged 71 -r IAD FIN DN -- 10'D Minister Prime Menahem Begin, commend- ing ARMDI efforts, re- marked: "I have heard with deep satisfaction of the wonderful work being per- formed by the American- Red Magen David for Israel. This great human effort is, I understand, to be crowned by a new and important project which your organ- ization is sponsoring, the construction of the MDA National Blood Center in Tel Aviv. "This is, indeed, an enterprise worthy of the American Magen David Adom in commemoration of Israel's 30th anniversary of independence. Your endeavor is an expression of all that is noble and good in our eternal Jewish heri- tage." Dr. John J. Mames, chairman of the Michi- gan Region and Dr. Mor- ris Starkman chairman Medical-Dental council indicated that the tes- timonial dinner honoring Rae Ann Sharfman on Sept. 17 at Cong. Bnai Moshe will greatly bene- fit the new blood center. Mrs. Sharfman, one of the founders of the Michigan Region, ARMDI, will be honored for "displaying exemplary dedication and continuous generous sup- port of life saving and far- and national ARMDI chairman Joseph Handle- man will bring greetings on behalf of Armdi, Magen David Adorn and the new Blood Center. Cantor Louis Klein of Bnai Moshe and Cantor Samuel Greenbaum of Cong. Beth Shalom will perform a musical tribute at the event. Dinner chairman Myron S. Steinberg pointed out that an additional feature of the new facility will be a Garden of Remembrance. On the walls of the garden will be cited the names of individual founder-patrons or organization pillars in tribute to their generosity. Speaking on behalf of the Michigan Region, Air: - 'T., Mames and Starkm, marked, "This magnificent and vitally needed project deserves our complete sup- port. We are confident that our friends of MDA, the entire community, will join us in extending generous assistance for the life saving and far-reaching humanitarian programs of Magen David Adorn, Is- rael's Emergency Medical Services." For reservations, call Dr. Mames, 353-0433; David Brenners 357-3571; or Mrs. Felix Rosenzweig, 353- 4038, after 6 p.m.