Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Ukrainian refugees to receive free medical services in Israel

The care will be provided by Terem Medical Clinics, which normally provides emergency screening and care, including treatments for various pressing injuries, heart attacks and other emergencies.

Knesset member Idit Silman meets with Terem Medical Clinic's CEO Natan Applebaum. Credit: Terem.
Knesset member Idit Silman meets with Terem Medical Clinic’s CEO Natan Applebaum. Credit: Terem.

Israel’s Terem Medical Clinics will be providing free treatment to Ukrainian refugees who do not qualify to join a health fund.

Earlier this week, Knesset member Idit Silman (Yamina), who chairs the Knesset’s Health Committee, called on the country’s health and medical organizations to step up and provide care in Israel as “humanitarian aid.”

“It is important for us, as a Jewish state, not to stand aside when a serious humanitarian crisis occurs,” Silman said.

Terem normally provides emergency screening and care, including treatments for various pressing injuries, heart attacks and other emergencies. However, the organization said that if Ukrainian citizens have other medical issues that need addressing, including receiving primary care or treatment for chronic diseases, it will also provide that support until they can return to their country.

Moreover, a spokesperson for Terem told JNS that the organization was in discussion with other companies about the possibility that the refugees will also receive free medicine.

Terem was already providing emergency medical treatment to foreign workers and asylum seekers living in the center of the country, especially in southern Tel Aviv, explained Natan Applebaum, Terem Medical Clinic’s CEO.

“We will now expand our services to the entire country,” he said. “Ukrainian refugees will be able to get care at any clinic, from Eilat in the south to Karmiel or Nahariya in the north. Once they are identified as refugees, they will have access to all of the center’s services.”

Israel has a socialized medical system that is operated by four large health funds. However, the system is only available to citizens in good standing (including new immigrants) and individuals in certain permanent residency categories.

Tourists, diplomats, foreign citizens and foreign-exchange students living in the country can opt-in for private health insurance options through the health funds with prices ranging between 300 shekels ($90) and 2000 shekels ($610)—prices that could be too high for refugees who have been forced to leave everything behind.

Since the outbreak of the war on Feb. 24, some 5,600 Ukrainians who are not entitled to become Israeli citizens have entered the country, according to Israel’s Interior Ministry.

David Livingston was one of five current and former elected officials from the region to receive an award from the Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles at a Yom Ha’atzmaut event.
Rabbi Sruli Fried, director of Chai Lifeline New Jersey, stated that the Pennsylvania senator showed “genuine interest in our work.”
Regime spokesman says Washington cannot use threats, urges end to war, calls Hormuz secure and blames U.S. and Israel
Unseasonable cold front brings first May snowfall in 15 years to Mount Hermon’s upper level, as Israelis share striking footage on social media.
The National Education Association “sends the message to the local and state affiliates that antisemitism is acceptable,” Marci Lerner Miller, of the Brandeis Center, told JNS.
“When we talk about irrigation or plants, we see that this common language can overcome many political difficulties,” Tomer Malchi told JNS.