The Jerusalem Post

At Polish clinic for Ukraine refugees, Hadassah’s doctors dispense medicine and expertise

- • By LARRY LUXNER

After Russian shelling intensifie­d last month and a rocket exploded close to the Zhytomyr home of Nina, 76, she fled for Ukraine’s Polish border. When she arrived several days later after a long trip by car with other Zhytomyr residents, Nina was experienci­ng severe back pain.

She was directed to the Przemysl Humanitari­an Aid Center, a repurposed shopping mall near the Medyka border crossing in southeaste­rn Poland, where doctors from Jerusalem’s Hadassah Medical Organizati­on have been running the medical clinic since March. There, she received treatment by doctors and Russian- and Ukrainian-speaking nurses who had volunteere­d to go to Poland as part of Hadassah’s ongoing Ukraine relief effort. Nina was far from alone.

At what felt like the last possible minute, Elena escaped Kharkiv, Ukraine, with her 13-year-old twins and her autistic 15-year-old son, Daniel, who cannot speak. Janna, 77, who ran from the devastated Ukrainian port city of Mariupol, contracted a severe case of pneumonia during her three-day road trip to Lviv. When Lviv itself came under air attack, the main hospital there discharged Janna and evacuated her to Poland.

All these refugees ended up at Hadassah’s clinic.

“My grandfathe­r’s cousin perished in Bialystok, not far away from where we were,” Rivka Brooks, director of pediatrics at Hadassah-University Medical Center on Jerusalem’s Mount Scopus, said in an interview from Poland. “Imagine seeing the same Polish scenery and women standing with one suitcase 80 years after the Holocaust, when no one was there for us. You can’t not feel emotional about it.”

Brooks, 52, is among dozens of Hadassah doctors and nurses – both Jews and Arabs – who have volunteere­d over the last two and a half months for the humanitari­an mission, a collaborat­ion among the Hadassah Medical Organizati­on (HMO), which operates two hospitals in Jerusalem; the New Yorkbased Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organizati­on of America, which is funding the effort; and Hadassah Internatio­nal, the organizati­on’s global fundraisin­g arm.

Dr. Yoram Weiss, acting director-general of the Jerusalem medical center and the person who designed and oversees the Ukraine program, said Hadassah began sending medical teams to the Polish border in early March. Now on its 10th mission, Hadassah already has treated more than 10,000 refugees and plans to maintain its presence in Poland at least through early June.

“It seems the numbers are decreasing, but we’re being very careful because as hostilitie­s increase there’s a possibilit­y we’ll end up seeing more refugees,” said Weiss, 63, an anesthesio­logist who spent eight years running Hadassah’s Ein Kerem campus and the last seven months as HMO’s acting director-general. “At least for the next month, we’ll continue to offer our services.”

Most of those services consist of stabilizin­g patients with urgent health problems, like cancer and heart disease; treating refugees for gastrointe­stinal issues resulting from poor nutrition during the journey from Ukraine; and providing medication­s left behind in the rush to evacuate cities under attack.

In addition to running the medical clinic at the Przemysl refugee center, Hadassah doctors and nurses are treating children at a second refugee center in nearby Korczowa, Poland, and, in partnershi­p with Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), triaging trauma patients at the border. In addition, Hadassah sent trauma experts to train their Polish counterpar­ts at the Medical University of Lublin, a regional trauma center about 200 km. to the north, in how to handle major traumatic injuries and mass casualty situations.

“Unlike other organizati­ons, our physicians do not come independen­tly, but as a group – four physicians, including two pediatrici­ans, four nurses and an administra­tor,”

Weiss said. “All are volunteers, and sometimes we have more people who want to go than we can accommodat­e.”

David “Dush” Barashi, Hadassah’s head medical clown, has been one of the medical center’s volunteers, putting sick and often anxious children at ease with his pranks and silliness. It was Dush who noticed a fragile eight-year-old boy and gently convinced him and his mother to come to the clinic, where the boy received a thorough check-up.

“The amount of respect we have gained with the WHO, Médecins Sans Frontières and the Polish Red Cross is really amazing,” Weiss said. “They look at Hadassah and our impact on treating refugees, and they see us as an example of how things should have been done.”

THE JEWISH Federation­s of North America have been supportive. JFNA president Eric Fingerhut visited the Hadassah border clinic and JFNA has given Hadassah two grants to support

the humanitari­an mission.

Brooks, the pediatrici­an, who volunteere­d in Poland from March 28 to April 9, said the most common conditions she encountere­d were anxiety, high blood pressure, abdominal pain and food poisoning.

Among her patients: a child with cystic fibrosis, a 16-year-old with severe frostbite in her toes and a multiple sclerosis patient who had forgotten to pack her pills in the rush to flee the Russian bombs.

“It’s very upsetting to see people who fled their country with only a suitcase,” said Brooks, 52. “It’s only women; you hardly see any men.” Men were required to stay behind to fight. “And it took me five days to suddenly notice that the children are very quiet and subdued.”

Ahmad Naama, a senior emergency room physician at Hadassah’s Ein Kerem campus, is one of several Arab doctors who have joined their Jewish colleagues to care for Ukrainian refugees in Poland.

“With my 11 years of knowledge

and experience in the ER, I was sure there was something I could offer,” the 37-year-old trauma specialist said when asked why he volunteere­d for the mission. “I even took an ultrasound machine with me and used it in a few cases. One was for a pregnant woman concerned about her baby. Another was an 80-year-old lady who had fluid in her lungs. We sent her to the hospital, which more or less saved her life.”

During Naama’s stint at the Przemysl aid center in mid-April, he often saw 150 to 200 patients a day.

“Most of the refugees were close to the areas being bombed and they left. Others were hidden undergroun­d for a week or two,” said Naama, who lives in Jerusalem. “They usually leave their medicines behind, and they arrive very stressed, vomiting and with diarrhea – especially the kids, because they were on buses and they’re dizzy and nauseous.”

The ER doctor recalled a boy of seven – the same age as his son – who couldn’t even urinate because he was so emotionall­y and physically

exhausted.

“It’s very sad what’s happening. This is 2022, and unfortunat­ely, history always repeats itself,” he said. “Ordinary people came to our camp with a small bag, not even a suitcase. They left everything behind and it’s a matter of survival. It’s a disaster.”

Ruven Gelfond, 51, head nurse for orthopedic surgery at Hadassah’s Mount Scopus campus, already had taken part in missions to Ethiopia, Haiti and the Philippine­s before traveling to Poland. His logistics expertise and knowledge of both Ukrainian and Russian were crucial in organizing donated medical supplies and distributi­ng locally sourced medication­s.

“We weren’t doing heroic surgery as in Haiti, but our help was critical, and our ability to make quick diagnoses saved lives,” said Gelfond, recalling how one patient developed dangerous bedsores after one month in a damp cellar and another suffered a burst appendix. “Many patients were in severe emotional distress. We provided a modicum of hope in a sea of despair.” (JTA)

 ?? (Hadassah/JTA) ?? DR. RIVKA BROOKS, director of pediatrics at Hadassah’s Mount Scopus campus, shows a young Ukrainian refugee how a stethoscop­e works. Brooks is one of Hadassah’s many doctors who volunteere­d at the organizati­on’s border clinic in Poland.
(Hadassah/JTA) DR. RIVKA BROOKS, director of pediatrics at Hadassah’s Mount Scopus campus, shows a young Ukrainian refugee how a stethoscop­e works. Brooks is one of Hadassah’s many doctors who volunteere­d at the organizati­on’s border clinic in Poland.
 ?? (Jorge Diener/JTA) ?? DR. AHMAD NAAMA, a senior ER physician at Hadassah, at the medical center’s border clinic in Poland.
(Jorge Diener/JTA) DR. AHMAD NAAMA, a senior ER physician at Hadassah, at the medical center’s border clinic in Poland.

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