The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Trail blazers with lasers

Young severe burn victims do not have to be scarred for life

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

The most common children’s injury in Israel’s winter months: burns. Thousands of children are rushed each year to hospital emergency rooms due to burns. Health Ministry statistics show that in 2015, more than 3,000 children came to emergency rooms and Terem clinics suffering from burns. Many other burn incidents go unreported.

These injuries strike children from every sector of society – caused by terrorist attacks, cooking-related scalding, Sabbath and festival candles (especially in the Orthodox community), and open flames and heaters (especially among the Bedouin and Druze).

“It is better to prevent burns than to treat them,” said Prof. Josef Haik, director of the National Burn Center at Sheba Medical Center, but that is not always possible

SOON THERE will be new hope for child burn victims, with the opening of the Israel Pediatric Aesthetic and Reconstruc­tive Laser Surgery Center of Excellence (I-PEARLS), which will be directed by Haik on the Sheba campus. The facility will offer stateof–the-art laser therapy to every child in Israel without regard to their nationalit­y, religion or ability to pay.

The I-PEARL groundbrea­king ceremony took place on January 31, but the groundwork for the center was laid many years before by Samuel Davis, president and founder of the US-headquarte­red Burn Advocates Network, which is partnering with Sheba on I-PEARLS.

In 2007, Davis had a dream of starting a nonprofit organizati­on that would help transform the lives of young burn survivors.

“Burn Advocates Network Ltd. was founded to bring psycho-social healing in countries lacking the resources that we take for granted in the US,” Davis explained.

Since then, he has opened “burn camps” in Israel, India and Brazil, helping hundreds of children rebuild the shattered self-image that almost always accompanie­s serious burns.

A few years ago, Davis was approached by a 16-year-old camper at Israel’s burn camp, Camp Sababa in Kfar Galim, who said she could not get a date because of her scar. Davis was so moved by the child’s plea for help in minimizing the raised and hyper-pigmented scars on her face, that he researched what options might be available to her in Israel.

“Only months before, I had attended a lecture at Massachuse­tts General Hospital where the speakers described how they were using lasers – not just any lasers, Israeli lasers,” he said. “I was shocked to learn that lasers were not being used to treat disfigurin­g scars on children in the very country that developed and manufactur­es them. I could not understand why Israeli kids did not have that choice.”

Davis reached out to Haik; the rest is history.

Haik said that today’s highly sophistica­ted laser technology

is able to “change the function and the aesthetic appearance of the scar.”

This new generation of lasers, Co2 ablative lasers, have the capacity to penetrate the thickest raised scars and make them softer and suppler. The vascular laser reduces discolorat­ion and abnormalit­ies caused by burns and the non-ablative laser safely treats atrophic scars.

Haik designed and led the effort to build the advanced, $50 million hi-tech burn center at Sheba, which has been designated as Israel’s national burn center. Now he will serve as director of this pediatric burn center, too. In this new role, Haik will oversee the clinical operations and the training of plastic surgeons and dermatolog­ists in the use of lasers for children with burn scars and other cosmetic and functional deficits.

THE FIRST patients will be Camp Sababa campers.

“We give kids with burn scars a unique experience, the experience of being in a place where they can simultaneo­usly heal and make friends, where they are not judged by their scars and have the opportunit­y to talk about what it is like with people who understand,” Davis said of his camp. “In burn camps, we want to restore their spirits. With the lasers, we want to make their scars look better and feel better.”

Patients will include those like Noa (name changed), who was born in Israel to Eritrean parents who entered Israel illegally from the Egyptian border. At the age of 18 months, she accidental­ly drank a very strong cleaning acid. She was transporte­d to the hospital in critical condition with burns to her mouth, vocal chords, esophagus and trachea. She also sustained third-degree burns on her face.

Noa was hospitaliz­ed for six months, mainly in intensive care, enduring multiple surgeries.

During the hospitaliz­ation time, her parents visited her rarely and the hospital contacted Social Services. Ultimately, she was transferre­d to a foster family.

Her foster parents asked about the possibilit­y for plastic treatment for the scars on Noa’s face. They were told that it would be possible to do revision surgery, but even then, cutting out the scar tissue posed serious risks.

The parents accepted this fate until they were introduced to Haik. After a meeting, Noa was scheduled to undergo laser treatment.

“Dozens of our campers and thousands of other children in Israel will have life-changing benefits from laser surgery,” Davis said, noting that the treatment is covered by National Insurance. “I said, let’s create this as a flagship program, an example of what can be done with well-trained surgeons and dermatolog­ists – not only to change the way children look – and that is important – but to change the way their scars feel.”

I-PEARLS will likewise be a teaching hospital to train the use of these lasers to doctors from other hospital across Israel and from around the world. The center is already using some lasers now, as it builds itself out to completion.

“I call Sheba the tikkun olam capital of Israel,” said Davis. “Sheba, under Haik, will be responsibl­e for Israel becoming a leader again in medical lasers – this time for children.”

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 ?? (Photos: Courtesy) ?? (LEFT) SAM Davis (top left), who founded Camp Sababa 11 years ago for adolescent burn victims (some pictured), pose with Celebrity Chef staff at the ground-breaking of the new cuttingedg­e I-PEARL facility last month. SHEBA MEDICAL Center directorge­neral Yitshak Kreiss (right) lends his support.
(Photos: Courtesy) (LEFT) SAM Davis (top left), who founded Camp Sababa 11 years ago for adolescent burn victims (some pictured), pose with Celebrity Chef staff at the ground-breaking of the new cuttingedg­e I-PEARL facility last month. SHEBA MEDICAL Center directorge­neral Yitshak Kreiss (right) lends his support.
 ??  ?? (CLOCKWISE) DAVIS has opened burn camps in Israel, India and Brazil, helping hundreds of children (like the one pictured) rebuild their shattered self-image.
(CLOCKWISE) DAVIS has opened burn camps in Israel, India and Brazil, helping hundreds of children (like the one pictured) rebuild their shattered self-image.
 ??  ?? CELEBRITY CHEFS and a burn victim collaborat­e in the cooking of a delicious meal.A BURN victim has her caricature drawn at the groundbrea­king ceremony. The most common children’s injury in Israel’s winter months is burns.
CELEBRITY CHEFS and a burn victim collaborat­e in the cooking of a delicious meal.A BURN victim has her caricature drawn at the groundbrea­king ceremony. The most common children’s injury in Israel’s winter months is burns.
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