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Free medical equipment lending network for Jewish communities starts roll-out across Europe

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One of the most pressing needs faced by many Jewish communities across Europe in the mouth of the COVID crisis was the severe shortage of medical equipment to care for community members who were discharged from hospitalization and were recuperating at home due to restrictions and the pressures on the health care systems, writes Yossi Lempkowicz.

“The lending of medical equipment in the format used in Israel does not exist in many European countries and many members of the community simply could not afford to purchase the equipment. We identified this need arose from almost all our conversations with community leaders whose members contracted the disease,” explained European Rabbinical Centre (RCE) General Director Rabbi Aryeh Goldberg. The centre operates within the framework of the European Jewish Association (EJA).

He continued: “After a needs-based survey across the continent, we compiled a diverse list of equipment that will serve the members of the communities – free – from birth to old age,” he said. Rabbi Yossi Beinhaker, RCE project manager, said that each charity centre includes more than 300 items, including: oxygen generators, wheelchairs, bathing chairs, crutches, rollers, breast pumps, cots, TENS devices, blood pressure monitors and dozens more.

In addition, the charity centers will also provide a maintenance service for the preservation, sterilization and repair of non-perishable medical equipment and accessories, and will manage a logistical system for the distribution and collection of the equipment and accessories to and in the homes of community members in need. Rabboi Beinhaker mentioned that the first charity centre on the network is already operating in the Ukrainian city of Odessa.

More branches will open in the coming weeks. It is foreseen that by the end of 2021, 26 charity centres will be lending medical equipment in Ukraine, Belarus, Bulgaria, Latvia, Romania, Poland, Croatia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Georgia, and Montenegro. “The inauguration of the first centre in Ukraine is an exciting milestone, said Schwartzman Roman Markowitz, chairman of the Association of Holocaust Survivors in Odessa.

“Holocaust survivors were already given hot meals but, in many cases, could not get up from bed and go to the kitchen to eat them. Now, thanks to the Centre, we can also get free medical equipment.” Rabbi Menachem Margolin, chairman of the European Jewish Association, congratulated the staff of the European Rabbinical Centre on the professional and rapid response to the needs of the communities in implementing the initiative and announced that the association maintains contacts with medical professionals in various European countries.

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