Friends of Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer
2009 show/hide
Israeli medical team saves sight in MyanmarProf. Jacob Lavee's New Organ Donor Prioritization Plan Adopted into Law, and Draws International AttentionSheba's Prof. Raphi Walden Awarded the French Legion of HonorIsraeli Researchers Make Significant Progress in Heart Tissue EngineeringSheba's Dr. Jacob Kuint and colleagues find that postpartum depression negatively affects infant developmentSheba's Dr. Shai Izraeli discovers novel alternative to chemotherapy for children with leukemiaSheba, NYU researchers to draw genetic map of wandering JewA new school of thought: A plan to open the country's fifth medical school brings opportunities to re-think doctor trainingSarah Ferber of Sheba in Israel shows that potentially, patients with diabetes can be donors of their own therapeutic tissueStudy shows why simple carbs are bad for youStudy traces high carb link to heart attacksIn pursuit of a happiness geneUsing PlayStation to heal severe burn trauma Israel, PA and Jordan cooperate as flu threat grows Babies given transfusions in the womb do wellDecrease In Sense Of Smell Seen In Lupus PatientsSheba Doctor Publishes Inflammatory Breast Cancer Drug AdvanceSheba's Prof. Mordechai Shani to be Awarded Israel's Top Award: "The Israel Prize" for Lifetime Achievement The Last Soldier Goes Home Keep on giving: U.S. donor not deterred by financial downturnIsrael's first center for child abuse victims opens at Sheba Medical CenterInnovative cardiac valve prosthesis developed at ShebaHigher A1C Levels Linked to Lower Brain Function: Study Published by the American Diabetes Association Suggests Lowering A1C Levels Could Reduce Decline in Cognitive Function Gaza War Update II from Sheba Medical CenterIDF Chief-of-Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi at Sheba: "I Thank Sheba for its Remarkable and Irreplaceable Work on Behalf of the Nation and its Soldiers!"Medical Update on the Gaza War'Not all Israelis are bad': Eight-year-old Palestinian cancer patient treated near Tel Aviv grateful to Israeli doctors
Israel's first center for child abuse victims opens at Sheba Medical Center
Date03/16/2009
AuthorRuth Eglash
SourceThe Jerusalem Post

Israel's first all-encompassing center for child and teen victims of sexual and physical abuse will open Tuesday as a separate department at Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer.

Based on the successful US model, where currently 600 such centers are in operation, Beit Lynn will provide abuse victims between the ages of three and 18 with a wide range of services and therapy, including social welfare and legal services.

Its creation is based on a law passed last year, which calls for six more such centers to be set up.

"This is the first center of its kind to be established in Israel, and bringing together medical staff with other responders will provide the capacity to give treatment quickly and effectively in the most traumatic of cases," said Prof. Ze'ev Rotstein, Sheba Medical Center's director-general.

Funded by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, together with the Ministry of Welfare and Social Services, Sheba Medical Center, NGO Ashalim, the Israel Police Force and contributions from the ministries of health, justice and education, the new center aims to streamline the initial process rape victims must undergo, whether their attacker is a family member or a stranger.

In the past, victims were forced to visit each office independently, usually being carted around by their parents from the hospital to the police station and on to social workers and lawyers.

The new center will bring all these elements together under one roof, with all first responders sharing information and easing the trauma for the victim.

A pilot center run along similar lines has been operating in Jerusalem for the past several years and was also established by the Schusterman Foundation. It is not based in a hospital, however.

According to the latest information from the Ministry of Welfare and Social Services, there are some 40,000 cases of child abuse reported each year, with child welfare officers following up on roughly one-fourth of those reports.

Last year, child welfare officers investigated 8,716 cases of child abuse, a rise of 12 percent over the previous year.

"This is a very welcomed and essential initiative," Minister of Welfare and Social Services Isaac Herzog said in a statement. "It will provide Israel with a breakthrough in the treatment of children and youth who have been abused physically, sexually or emotionally."

"The new center will allow thousands of children who have gone through a terrible trauma to receive the necessary treatment in an appropriate and holistic manner, all under one roof," he added.

Beit Lynn is expected to treat more than 700 children and teens a year from the area surrounding the hospital.

 

This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1237114843849&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull

 

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