THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 15, 1981 39 Meyer and Mary Must honored at Annual Dinner Congregation Bnai David, June 17th, 19861 SHAARE ZEDEK SHAARE ZEDEK MEDICAL CENTER JERUSALEM • 107 YEARS OF HEALING Detroit Friends of Shaare Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem 13128 Wales, Huntington Woods, Mich. 48070 544-8412 or 547-3890 In serv ce o all Aman SHAARE ZEDEK MEDICAL CENTER in Jerusalem is a university affiliated teaching hospital. The $55 million Medical Center, located on a 14-acre site opposite Mount Herzl was opened in the summer of 1979. It is nearly a century since a committee was or- ganized to establish the Shaare Zedek Hospital. Its activities culminated in the construction, in 1902, of a hospital building which serves the population of Jerusalem till today. The original 26-bed facility was, in fact, the first hospi- tal outside the walls of old Jerusalem. Shaare Zedek has been a history of beginnings. Each decade of the hospi- tal's existence has opened new frontiers in medical care and research for Jerusalem and her environs. Since the establishment of the only isolation ward in Jerusalem in 1910, Shaare Zedek played a life-saving role when the various epidemics of typhoid, diptheria; polio and cholera struck the city. Ips• each of Jerusalem's great crises, Shaare Zedek has played an in- strumental role in saving lives. During the Arab riots of 1921 and 1933, throughout the Second World War, in the War of Independence, and again during the Six-Day War, the doctors and staff worked around the clock to cope with the emer- gency situation' — often while under heavy born- bardment from enemy guns. Known as "Jerusalem's hospital with a heart," Shaare Zedek is a hospital where the concept of community service is em- phasized. Every effort is taken to continue our tradi- tion of personal contact between each patient and the hospital staff, during and after hospitalization. The Israel medical pro- fession, as in medical communities in many countries abroad, is di- vided into two segments; the hospital and its doctors on one hand and clinics and private, physicians on the other. Shaare Zedek is attempting to bridge this "paper wall" of referrals and notes and to send the hospital physician into the community - and bring the private doctor into the hospital. The concept of the community hospital that we are attempting to de- velop is based on the premise that the hospital is only one link in the chain of medical facilities required in the community. This chain starts in the cocn- munity with clinics of var- ious types: screening clinics; clinics for advice; well baby clinics; etc. These clinics funnel the patient into the acute hos- pital where the care that can be given with the aid of modern equipment and instrumentation is avail- able. From the acute hos- pital the patients move out to extended care facilities and to institutions for chronic care and nursing and eventually back into the community. Not all in- dividuals must of neces- sity pass through all links in the chain, but to ensure total health care, all links must exist. Shaare Zedek has also initiated a Home Care Program, the first in Israel. Doctors, nurses, social workers and physio- therapists go out of the hospital and into the homes of the patients to continue their medical care after discharge. Thus the program maintains in the home setting medical treatment first given in the hospital and by this variety of care, continues to keep the patient in good health and in his home. Always striving to corn- bine modern medicine with Jewish tradition, Shaare Zedek is a hospital for all Jerusalem's people, regardless of religious af- filiation, and both staff and patients include Christians and Moslems. For the staff of Shaare Zedek, patients are not merely "gall bladders" and "ulcers" but individuals who are treated with con- sideration of all the social, environmental and psy- , - chological problems as- sociated with disease. During the summer of 1979, the century old Shaare Zedek Hospital moved from its antiquated quarters to a new 55- million dollars complex overlooking the city and convenient to its inhabi- tants. For -the first time in many years, this remarka- ble institution is prepared to serve the medical 0 SCOPE OF ACTIVITY This year Shaare Zedek provided: 97,001 Adult Hospitalization Days 18,542 Pediatric Hospitalization Days 14:575 Adult AdmissiOns 72,300 Outpatient Clinic Visits 26,760 Emergency Cases 4,110 Deliveries 4,574 Neonatal Intensive Care Days 3,269 Cardiac & General Intensive Care Days 5,022 Surgical Operations 2,600 Adult Dialysis Treatments 936 Pediatric Dialysis Treatments 1,000,000 Laboratory Tests 30,123 X-rays 4,080 Total Body C.A.T. Scans 4,820 Neurological Examinations 1,440 Cardiology Examinations 1,815 Nuclear Medicine Tests 400,000 of needs Jerusalemites with the latest medical equipment and technology. THESE ARE THE FACTS on the Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem Size: 1,300,000 square feet Number of Beds: 500 at first stage: later expan- sion to over 600 0 COMPREHENSIVE FACILITIES 25 Inpatient Departments 22 Diagnostic Insitutes, Laboratories and Services for Inpatients and Outpatients 33 Specialized Outpatient Clinics 17 Para-medical Departments and Services STAFF, STUDENT NURSES AND VOLUNTEERS 115 Doctors 265 Nurses 110 Para-medical, Laboratory Technicians, Medical Administration 360 Technical, Administrative Services, School of Nursing, Maintenance 850 Total Staff (full time) 400 Part Time Volunteers 58 Girls, National Service Program 90 Student Nurses