The Jerusalem Post

Kaplan Hospital gets new children’s wing

Ashdod lays cornerston­e for general facility

- (Courtesy Kaplan Medical Center and Assuta Medical Centers) • By JUDY SIEGEL

Two important medical facilities were launched on Monday – a children’s hospital at Rehovot’s Kaplan Medical Center opened and the cornerston­e was laid at an Ashdod hospital to be opened in five years.

Both sites are within shooting range of Grad rockets from Gaza. The four-story children’s wing has been built to very high standards, medically, aesthetica­lly and defensivel­y, with reinforcem­ent, generators and air filtration.

Children in the wards throughout the building’s 9,000 square meters of space may communicat­e with the medical staff, order lunch and participat­e in classes via advanced multimedia equipment at their bedside. Only two beds are in each room. The original hospital building was constructe­d in metalwalle­d huts in 1953. A major donation from the Legacy Foundation to Kaplan’s owner, Clalit Health Services, made the building possible.

Prime Minister and formally Health Minister Binyamin Netanyahu sent his greetings to management, noting that 700,000 residents in the area will be served by the facility in times of quiet and in emergency. Hospital director Dr. Ya’acov Yahav said the children’s building is a “revolution” in pediatric medicine under one roof.

Meanwhile, the port city of Ashdod had a glimpse of what is due to become it’s first hospital, which in five years will serve an area population of 300,000. The public hospital will be owned and run by the private Assuta Medical Centers, which has been allowed by the government to offer certain private medical services there as well. It will cost Assuta NIS 650 million and have 300 inpatient beds.

Assuta chairman Prof. Yehoshua Shemer, directorge­neral Dr. Eitan Hai-am, Ashdod Mayor Yehiel Lasry and others laid the cornerston­e. Shemer, a former Health Ministry directorge­neral, said Ashdod will have the most advanced hospital in the country when it opens. Lasry said some 1,000 residents will have jobs at the hospital, which will be university affiliated. Rahel Shmueli, a lawyer, is director-general of the planned hospital.

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