Despite public protest, doctors told to treat terrorists as they would any other patient. Only important consideration should be the medical condition at hand, reads letter.
Until the center opened last month, Jerusalem had a shortage of rehab beds. The new center will have 132 beds and will be able to treat 10,000 patients a year.
Dr. Dvora Bauman, director of the Bat Ami Center for Victims of Sexual Abuse at the Hadassah Medical Organization, sheds light on the pressing issue of sexual violence perpetrated on October 7.
CMV is the most common infectious cause of birth defects in the US, with about one in 200 infants born with cCMV, and 20% of newborns with it will have health difficulties, some of them lifelong.
Dr. Donna Zfat-Zwas, a cardiologist and the director of the Linda Joy Pollin Cardiovascular Wellness Center for Women at Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem, delves into women's heart health.
Dr. Yoram Weiss discusses how Hadassah hospitals are coping with the surge in post-traumatic stress disorders following the October 7 attacks.
The IDF soldier, Shilo Segev, who has already begun restorative physiotherapy training in Hadassah's orthopedic department, said that he’s already seeing an improvement in functioning.
The Hadassah Medical Center is now offering 140 inpatient beds instead of the 40 that were in the hold center on Jerusalem's Mount Scopus.
Despite their wounds, they all want to get back in the fight – together they will win this war.