our house needs to be cleaned. gible for a formal American medical training program. "It's the same for any physician from a loreign country, excluding Canada," said Dr. Robert E. Bloom, internist and director of a new externship program for Soviet Jewish doctors at Sinai Hospital. "We can't help them pass the exams or get their papers in order, but we can expedite their train- ing once they've proved their eligibility." Because of a special grant, Dr. Feinstein and seven other Soviet doctors rotated through a special, four- month externship that in- troduced them to the Ameri- can medical system and brought them up to date on the latest in medical technology and phar- macological techniques. The grant, made possible by Mrs. Nedra Kapetansky of West Bloomfield, was es- tablished in November in memory of her late husband, Donald, a former staff physi- "The goal is to get Soviet doctors up to snuff." Dr. Robert E. Bloom cian at Sinai, and in memory of their son, Robert, who died recently in a boating accident. "Mrs. Kapetansky wanted the money to go to establish Soviet Jewish doctors," said Pola Friedman, Sinai cor- porate director of public and community relations. "This kind of grant fits perfectly with Sinai's ethic of Jewish physicians helping other Jewish physicians." Sinai has a history of training foreign externs, ex- plained Dr. Bloom. However, this externship program is the first to accept trainees who haven't already been accepted into a residency program. "The goal is to get the Soviet doctors up to snuff, and then they can go on with us or continue on with a diff- erent program at another hospital," Dr. Bloom said. Externs function as fourth- year medical students and are under constant supervi- sion, Dr. Bloom said. At the end of their rotation, they become eligible for an American residency pro- gram. State law requires at least two years' post- graduate work before ob- taining a permanent medical license. Dr. Feinstein, who spoke no English when she came to Detroit two years ago, begins a residency program in internal medicine at Sinai this June. "I was in medical school for six years plus a year of internship,". said Dr. Feins- tien, who practiced medicine for four years in the Ukraine. "I knew it would be hard to retrain in America, but not this difficult. But I was deter- mined to become a doctor in the United States." After moving to Detroit, Dr. Feinstein studied 10 hours a day for eight months at a Stanley H. Kaplan Edu- cation Center, while her husband, a Soviet engineer, looked after relatives, the house, and their 6-year-old son. Dr. Feinstein passed all three parts of the exam on the first try. "Laina is one of the most motivated people I've ever known," said Dr. Bloom. Dr. Feinstein admitted that, in the beginning, she resented having to meet new requirements. "That was because I didn't realize how far behind the American system the Soviet system was," she said. "It wasn't that we weren't good doctors or that we didn't know medicine, it was that we didn't have the same tools, drugs and methods of diagnosis that the West had. We were so cut off, we didn't think anybody else had them either." Dr. Bloom said this lack of technology is common among physicians from Eastern Bloc countries. "The majority of doctors from the behind the old Iron Curtain never saw a CAT Scan (Computerized Axial Tomography) nor ever saw or used an MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)," he said. "They're not familiar with Western dosages of medicines and only know of about 10 antibiotics. Ameri- can doctors work with about 70 antibiotics.'! Dr. Feinstein said the Soviet system of medicine is first about the Soviet system and last about the Soviet pa- tient. "I'm much more confident now; I know I benefitted from the retraining,' she said. "There were some diseases I never heard of." "In Russia, we practiced good medicine with the tools that were available," she said. "What we needed was to be taught how to fit the new technology and terms into what we already know." ❑ And dusted. And eventually someone's going to have to paint it. But the sensational new styles have arrived at Somerset. First things first. COLLECTION Big Beaver Road at Coolidge, Troy. M, Th, F 10-9; T, W, Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5 VIP services include complimentary gift wrapping at the concierge desk. A VERY HAPPY PASSOVER From EVERYONE at STRAWBERRY HILLS STRAWBERRY HILLS 32906 Middlebelt Farmington Hills, MI COATS UNLIMITED Oak Park Lincoln Center - 26150 Greenfield Rood Ook Pork, MI 48237 (013)968-2060 West Dloomfield Orchard Moll - 6337 Orchard Lake Rood West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (313) 8554955 Troy Troy Commons - 871 E. Big Beaver Rd. Troy, MI 48083 5284966 • WIN A MINK COAT • WIN A FABULOUS CRUISE! •WIN A LAS VEGAS ADVENTURE! SAVE ON STORAGE! cker-Tunis Fur and Leather Storage Arthur Bricker • John Minis Orchard Mall • 855- 9200 West Bloomfield THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 15