TAU conferene to teach int’l medical students about Israel
BY ALYX RIMBERG
JERUSALEM POST
StandWithUs-organized program to explore Israeli
medical aid.
Sixty-five
foreign medical students will come to TelAvivUniversity on Sunday to learn about
Israeli humanitarian aid efforts across the globe.
The four-day
Humanitarian Medical Conference, organized by 20 TAU students who have fellowships
from the StandWithUs public diplomacy leadership program, will explore the
trials and tribulations of Israeli medical aid.
Eleanor Fuks, a student spearheading the conference, said last week that it
would help make known the ingenuity of new Israeli medical practices and might
alter the world’s view of Israeli medicine.
The goal of this conference is to let people know that Israel has a
working humanitarian aid program.
Fuks described herself and the other conference organizers as “20 students who
are determined to show those abroad all that is not shown about Israeli medical
advancements.”
The conference will include panel discussions on subjects such as cutting edge
technology, Israeli human aid resources abroad, casualties experienced by Magen
David Adom personnel during the second intifada, and ethics.
The Medical Innovations panel will be led by Prof. Arie Orenstein, the director
of the Plastic Surgery Department and of AdvancedTechnologyCenter
at the ShebaMedicalCenter
at Tel Hashomer, and Prof. Anat Loewenstein, a member of the board of directors
of the Yokne’am-based Given Imaging medical technology company.
Given Imaging invented the PillCam, a pill with a camera in its core to allow
inner body imaging that is used all over the world.
Col. Dr. Itzik Kreis, who was head of IDF’s field hospital in Haiti after
January’s earthquake, will lead the Humanitarian Aid panel.
The Israeli field hospital was the only one with an ethics panel.
Participants at the Humanitarian Medical Conference will also have the
opportunity to cooperate with IDF personnel in a workshop. It will teach the
students how to participate in a humanitarian aid mission and how to build a
field hospital.
The conference’s ethics panel will facilitate discussion of what one needs to
know when working in an area prone to terrorist attacks. Prof. Asa Kasher,
author of the IDF’s Code of Conduct, and Prof. Abraham Rivkind, head of the
general surgery department and trauma unit at HadassahUniversityHospital
in Jerusalem’s
Ein Karem, will lead this panel.
On Monday, all participants will visit HadassahHospital.
At the cardiology unit, they will be introduced to Lev Hashalom, a medical aid
project catering to Palestinians.
Representatives of Save A Child’s Heart, located in WolfsonMedicalCenter
in Holon, will
also host conference participants.
The medical students will visit the facilities where children stay before their
operations, and the recovery room.
Save
A Child’s Heart treats youngsters from around the world.
Amos Geva, a university spokesman for the conference, says its goals are
twofold.
“Our first concern is that the participants receive professional knowledge from
our program.
And through their newly acquired knowledge they will discover recent Israeli advancements.”