ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAYCELEBRA TION Monds:, April 9Nh-4:0 n. pm Page 10-Saturday, April 7,1979-The Michigan Daily 'U' to acquire new burn center Illustration Lecture:"The Trib( 1 2-- t. es of Israel, Their s and Dancers" -film and dancers U.UiTure -featuring AYALAH GOREN, Israel's leading folk dance teacher KUENZEL ROOM, MICHIGAN UNION MONDAY, APRIL 9th - 8:00 p.m. By JOHN GOYER The Michigan Department of Public Health has granted the University a certificate of need for a new $6.5 million Burn Center. The new 30-bed center will serve as a statewide facility for the care and treatment of severe burn victims. ACCORDING TO Dr. Irving Feller, University professor of surgery and director of thenew BurnsCenter, the facility will be a "model facility for teaching the complexities of all phases of burn care and for research into the many uncertainties of present day treatment." "Since severe burns affect virtually every system in the body and present dificfult infection problems, it was critical to the creation of a burn center Israel Independence Day Party - Workshop with AYALAH GOREN Pendleton Room, Michigan Union For information call 6633336 that it be located in a major medical center campus with immediate access to the disciplines of research, teaching and treatment methods," Feller said. . The center will include two intensive care units equipped for hydro-therapy, six "acute care" beds, and 12 rehabilitation beds. The center is designed to handle 590 in-patient and 2,300 out-patient visits annually. CONSTRUCTION OF the new center is slated to begin in November 1979. Although the center will be a part of the proposed new University Hospital, plans provide for the separate con- struction of the Burn Center. The center will rely on the hospital for laboratory services, radiology, dietetics, and housekeeping. The, National Institute for Burn Medicine (NIBM) and the University Development office will raise funds for the project. Existing burn care facilities are spread between three area hospitals, including a ten-bed unit in University Hospital. The new center will con- solidate all three units. FELLER SAID the present scat- tering of facilities is inefficient and that it contradicts the idea of having a team of specialists bring a patient through all stages of treatment and rehabilitation. The team of specialists consists of a surgical team, a physician, specially trained nurses, a social worker, a micro-biologist, a dietician and physical and occupational therapists. Feller and his colleagues at the Burn Center are responsible for many ad- vances in burn treatment. Twenty years ago, even severe burns were treated as primarily skin injuries, while patients died of complications and infection. AS A RESIDENT physician at University Hospital in 1957, Feller recognized that internal problems and infection killed many patients. Because of this realization, Feller was able to save the life of one young girl who had suffered burns over 70 per cent of her body, destroying the accepted belief that burns covering more than 30 per cent of the body would be fatal. University Hospital first established a burn clinic in 1961, and at the same time Feller began to compile case histories of burn victims. Using this information; the Burn Center has been able to direct research toward solving some major burn treatment problems. For examI ple, statistics showed that one type of bacteria was a primary cause of death in burn cases. After developing a vacI cine to counter the effects of this strain of bacteria, deaths from this type of in~ fection were cut by 80 per cent at the Burn Center.k Despite the emotional stress of helping burn victims, Feller tries t* prevent his patients' condition from ina terfering with his work. According to him, a doctor can best help a patient "by doing what you have to do to srake the person comfortable, without getting bogged down in your own feelings." I% Jobless A RHCDI woRK O C ss L Tuesday A10 12 NOON - DIAL 0 FEEL LIKE OU RE LO 3106 COMTWROL? CAIL-L 7b-GUIDE-24 hour counseling, crisis intervention & information. Sponsored by Counseling Services rate stays" stable in March WASHINGTON (AP)-The unem- ployment rate remained at 5.7 per cent for the second straight month in March, the lowest rate in 4% years, the gover- nment said yesterday. The report revealed growing optimism among Americans that they can find jobs. The number of people who have abandoned hope of getting work fell to 725,000 in the first three months of 1979, the lowest quarterly total since the third quarter of 1974, the Labor Depar- tment said. THE GOVERNMENT'S so-called "discouraged workers" are those who say they want work, but who have stop- ped because they feel nobody will hire them. These people are not counted as unemployed because they are no longer considered in the labor force. The Labor Department said total employment in March increased 200,000 to a new high of 96.8 million. There were 70,000 new jobs in manufacturing, notably in electrical-equipment, tran- sportation equipment and machinery. Bolloons and Entertainment *RECOGNIZE parent and ch ldren onc> t arr L4 * CELEBRATE the YEAR Of * SUPPORT the ChIild a-e c INTERNATIONAL THE. CHILD. ...n c Ca (7i J A Spc ff. -4 tK-; Uv F rN Gr~id (W4r~ L-GCiIUICW) _ 1 TEXA 10WEB INSTRUMENTS:NEW PRICES ARE HERE I the Data Chron A calculator. A clock/alarm. A stopwatch. 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