| IDF to use life-saving frozen blood Jun. 19,  2009 Judy Siegel-Itzkovich , THE JERUSALEM POST An Israeli biotechnology company is working with the army to  turn blood from newly enlisted soldiers into a freeze-dried powder - like coffee  - and send it with them to the battlefield. If those soldiers are ever wounded,  water could be added to produce their own blood instantly and create a  lifesaving infusion.   Leading the research is Core Dynamics, a Ness Ziona firm  active in the research and development of unique freezing, thawing and  freeze-drying technologies for application in blood transfusion, cell  preservation and tissue and organ transplantation.   OC Medical Corps Brig.-Gen. Dr. Nachman Ash announced the work  at the IDF's medical training center in Tzrifin on Wednesday, in his first-ever  briefing for health reporters.   If the idea proves itself, it could also have applications in  civilian life.   Ash, an internal medicine specialist who entered his current  post almost two years ago, also said that a Technion-Israel Institute of  Technology professor developed for the IDF a compact, portable device with  ceramic pipes that produces oxygen in the field for treating wounded soldiers,  replacing heavy gas tanks that have to be carried around.   "We aim to convert the working model into a commercial  device," Ash said. Another technology is a small battery-operated field device  that ventilates the wounded on the battlefield and is so simple to operate that  any medic can use it.   Ash and health reporters attended an exercise of soldiers  entering a mock Palestinian village and firing on "terrorists." Four of the  soldiers were seriously "wounded" - bags of red-liquid attached to their legs  and foreheads spurted out in a realistic manner, and the victims, who wailed as  if in pain, were treated by military medics.   The unusual press conference, which showed that the army is  interested in reaching the public in a variety of ways, began with a promotional  film the IDF Medical Corps made to interest young people in serving as military  physicians, of which there is a serious shortage. In addition to just  establishing the country's first-ever military medical school at the Hebrew  University-Hadassah Medical School in Jerusalem, the IDF has established a Web  site that speaks in the language of teenagers to encourage the best of them to  enlist for such service.   The Medical Corps is also now much more aware of the need to  immediately inform the families of soldiers when they are wounded and to support  them emotionally. Wounded soldiers are evacuated much more quickly from the  battlefield, often undergoing blood transfusions and other procedures in the  helicopter on the way to the hospital, Ash said. The Corps now invests in  health-promotion efforts - including smoking cessation courses - not only among  career soldiers but also for recruits, he said.   Ash revealed that, while in the past, one of the army's field  hospitals was closed while the other deteriorated, the IDF plans to open a  modern, innovative one within two years.   The Medical Corps, because of its unique functions and roles  on the battlefield and closer to home, has great expertise in coping with  trauma, readiness in treating victims of unconven 
 tional warfare, understanding  the physiology of soldiers in extreme conditions, and environmental threats to  soldiers. For example, during the current swine (H1N1) flu outbreaks, the Corps  realized it had to take measures much more strict than those recommended by the  Health Ministry to prevent the virus from spreading in close conditions from  soldier to soldier. Anyone infected would be quarantined instead of just being  sent home, Ash said.   The IDF is issuing a public tender for two health funds so  that health insurers used by the general public could also serve soldiers for  regular health problems, instead of them waiting for care in military clinics.  Eventually, all four health funds could be included, with soldiers allowed to  choose their health services supplier.   This article  can also be read at http://www.jpost.com  /servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184872965&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull [ Back to the Article ] | 
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