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United Hatzalah: The youngest volunteer - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

United Hatzalah ("united rescue" in Hebrew: ????? ????) is a free, volunteer-based emergency medical services (EMS) organization based in Jerusalem. It is one of many Hatzalah organizations in various parts of the world. Founded in 2006, it is the largest independent, non-profit and fully volunteer EMS organization in Israel, with more than 3,500 emergency medical technicians (EMT), certified first responders, paramedics and doctors dispersed throughout the country. From its LifeCompass Command Center, United Hatzalah uses advanced GPS-based dispatch technology to identify the closest and most qualified volunteers to the scene of an emergency and routes those individuals through a mobile device application. Cadres of trained civilian volunteers throughout Israel create a web of emergency first responders, each outfitted with medically equipped motorcycles ("ambucycles") capable of reaching victims in as few as 90 seconds. The organization is funded exclusively through private charitable support.

Within Israel, individuals may contact United Hatzalah through its direct emergency number, 1221; however, most dispatch information is received directly from national ambulance services. United Hatzalah in turn alerts and coordinates with local ambulance, Search and Rescue (SAR), fire, and police services, when necessary.

United Hatzalah of Israel is the largest independent, non-profit, fully volunteer Emergency Medical Service organization that provides the fastest and free emergency medical first response throughout Israel. United Hatzalah's service is available to all people regardless of race, religion, or national origin. United Hatzalah has more than 3,500 volunteers around the country, available around the clock - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. With the help of our unique GPS technology and our iconic ambucycles, our average response time is less than 3 minutes across the country and 90 seconds in metropolitan areas. Our mission is to arrive at the scene of medical emergencies as soon as possible and provide the patient with professional and appropriate medical aid until an ambulance arrives, resulting in many more lives saved.


Video United Hatzalah



History

As a young EMT in Jerusalem, Eli Beer recognized that heavy urban traffic and narrow streets often prevented ambulances from arriving in time to save a victim. In response, he organized a volunteer unit of EMTs within his Jerusalem neighborhood. After the Second Lebanon War (Hebrew: ????? ????? ??????, Milhemet Levanon HaShniya) in 2006, Beer brought together more than 50 separate Hatzalah chapters to form United Hatzalah of Israel. Initially, volunteers responded to less than 200 calls per day by monitoring two-way emergency radio scanners. As cellular technology evolved, volunteers migrated to a managed push-to-talk network, which enabled two-way communications between dispatchers and volunteer medics.

Later, United Hatzalah standardized ambucycles--motorcycles retrofitted with a storage box mounted to the back of the vehicles--each of which contains a complete trauma kit, an oxygen canister, a blood sugar monitor, and an automated external defibrillator. These ambucycles contain all of the lifesaving equipment commonly found in an ambulance but on a vehicle nimble enough to weave through traffic, narrow alleys, or obstructed roadways.

United Hatzalah then partnered with NowForce to create a proprietary mobile dispatch application to receive calls, assess the unique capabilities, mobility and equipment of the closest volunteers, and then route the most appropriate medics to a given emergency. Today, all volunteers receive alerts on their mobile phone through the NowForce command-and-control application [2].


Maps United Hatzalah



Results and Demographics

United Hatzalah currently responds to approximately 800 calls per day and as many as 1,200 calls during large-scale emergencies such as the 2014 Israel-Gaza Conflict. In 2014, the organization answered more than 245,000 calls, with a volunteer corps of 2,500 medics, and a fleet of 440 ambucycles. Of the 2,500+ volunteer medics, 38% are Haredi, 33.7% Modern Orthodox, 23.6% Secular, 3.1% Muslim, 1.1% Druze and .2% Christian, and .3% other.

United Hatzalah's lifesaving model has reduced average response time to three minutes; the average response time across Israel, however, remains between 10 and 12 minutes. On sudden cardiac arrest calls--the best measure of emergency medical performance--United Hatzalah's success in reducing response times and increasing quality of care have changed in lock step with national survival rates: In the 10 years since United Hatzalah's inception, the rate of cardiac-arrest deaths has decreased by 50%, according to the Israel Heart Society. At 46.4 deaths per 100,000 people, the World Health Organization reports that Israel ranks 12th best out of 192 countries in terms of coronary-related mortality.


Israeli grassroots lifesaving model goes international | ISRAEL21c
src: www.israel21c.org


SOS Mobile Application

Following the high-profile abduction and murder of three Israeli youths in June 2014, United Hatzalah responded with SOS, a one-swipe emergency alert application. Downloaded by more than 150,000 people, SOS sends a distress signal to United Hatzalah's 24/7 dispatch center, while also transmitting the user's GPS coordinates to law enforcement officials--a process that may otherwise require days of legal maneuvering. SOS is meant to function as an emergency safety and security alert system, complementing direct verbal communication with police, fire, or medical emergency dispatchers. The app was developed in conjunction with NowForce and may be downloaded for free at sos.nowforce.com in both English and Hebrew.


United Hatzalah of Israel at Terror Attack in Jerusalem-November 5 ...
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Awards and recognition

In April 2013, Eli Beer presented a TedMed talk titled, "The fastest ambulance? A motorcycle," in which he describes the circumstances that led to him to re-imagine first-response medicine by training volunteer EMTs to respond to local emergencies and stabilize victims until official help arrives. The video has been viewed more than a million times to date .

During the March 2015 American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) Policy Conference--the largest yearly gathering of the pro-Israel movement in the United States--United Hatzalah was honored as a featured innovator. AIPAC's Innovation Showcase was presented before 16,000 attendees and serves to highlight emerging technology developed in Israel but with worldwide impact.

In recognition of its dedication to save lives, Eli Beer, on behalf of United Hatzalah, has received numerous international accolades, including the Israeli Presidential Award for Volunteerism in 2011 and the Institute of International Education's Victor J. Goldberg Prize in 2013. In 2015, United Hatzalah received the OMETZ Award for its operational professionalism and transparent management. Eli Beer was personally recognized the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship in cooperation with the World Economic Forum (WEF) as a Social Entrepreneur in 2010. WEF subsequently named him a Young Global Leader in 2012 for his efforts to create a multicultural, apolitical medical rescue organization.


Israeli NGO Establishes Teams of Life-Saving First Responders ...
src: www.thetower.org


See also

  • Eli Beer
  • Health care in Israel
  • Emergency medical services in Israel

United Hatzalah at Tel Aviv Terror Attack, 21.1.2015 - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


References


File:United Hatzalah of Israel Helicopter Rescue.jpg - Wikimedia ...
src: upload.wikimedia.org


External links

  • Official Page
  • "Haredi, Arab saving lives together"
  • Israel's fast, free and innovative way to save lives
  • Forbes India, How An Israeli Organisation Could Help Accident Victims In India
  • The Economist, Saving lives - Scattered saviours
  • Eli Beer presents at TEDMED

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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