Hatzolah

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Hatzolah ("rescue" or "relief" in Hebrew), is a volunteer Emergency medical service (EMS) organization functioning in Israel and in many Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in major cities of the United States, as well as in Australia, South Africa, Mexico, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, Russia[1] and the United Kingdom[2].

In the United States, Hatzolah was founded in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York by Rabbi Hershel Weber in the late 1960's and has grown to become the largest all-volunteer ambulance service in the US[3]. The volunteers are trained EMTs or paramedics.

In marked distinction from most US EMS organizations, Hatzolah uses a fly-car system, where assigned members respond to the emergency with their private cars, with one member assigned to pick up the ambulance from the base location. Each Hatzolah volunteer is fully equipped with EMT or paramedic supplies. This system decreases response times dramatically. As an example, New York City EMS's overall response times, though they vary by the severity of the emergency, tend to average around 8 minutes, with an average of 5 minutes for the most urgent calls[4], while Hatzolah's daytime response time averages under 4 minutes, with overall night-time averages of 7-8 minutes, regardless of the severity of the call.[3]

[edit] Similar organizations

Some Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods have complementary volunteer squads. For example, some neighborhoods in New York City have Shomrim ( "custodian" or "guardian" ) citizen patrol organizations , and/or a Chaverim (literally, "friends") roadside assistance squad.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Emergency Response Service for Jews in Russia's Capital (2004). Retrieved on 26 December 2006.
  2. ^ Jewish health service offers local care (2003).
  3. ^ a b Bloomberg, M. (2005). Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg Announces Two Initiatives To Redevelop Underutilized Land In The Culver El Section Of Borough Park.
  4. ^ FDNY EMS Response Times (2006).


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