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Israel is revolutionizing global medicine

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Over the years, I have been to Israel many times and it is always an inspiring, amazing experience. This country is without question the United States’ most important ally in the Middle East. This time, I returned as a sponsored guest of Sheba Medical Center, Israel’s largest and most advanced hospital. 
So often, we think of Israel in the context of its conflict with the Palestinians or its other Arab neighbors, but medicine can provide an oasis of peace and coexistence in an otherwise turbulent region.
{mosads}Professor Yitshak Kreiss, the director general of the hospital and former surgeon general of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), outlined a vision to ensure that Israel’s health care and medical systems continue to evolve, serving the health not only of Israelis but Christians, Muslims, Jews and all other people from across the region in need of medical treatment.
 
Israel’s well-earned reputation as a hotbed of innovation was embodied by the various doctors I interviewed. Israel’s doctors are more than practitioners of medicine. They are visionaries and global leaders in their individual fields.
Meeting with Dr. Tzipora Strauss, the Jewish state’s leading neonatologist, I understood immediately that her own calling is to be in the intensive care unit every day preserving the lives of the most delicate newborns and giving them a chance not only to survive, but also to thrive.
 
I met a young Israeli who I truly believe may just be the world’s best shot at finding a cure for cancer. Professor Gal Markel, just 39 years old and already with 20 patents to his credit, is the youngest physician in the Jewish state ever to achieve a full professorship — the pinnacle of achievement in his field. Markel is turning the tables on cancer by daring to think boldly. With quiet confidence and chutzpah, for which Israelis have always been known, Professor Markel has dedicated his life to defeating the scourge of sickness that has impacted so many lives in America, Israel and all the world.
 
For Americans, it is hard to imagine how 20 percent of the country can be treated annually in one location in central Israel, but that is what takes place. In the national center for the IDF, groundbreaking medical technology provides injured soldiers with the care and long-term rehabilitation they often require. 

Israel has committed itself to cultivating hospitals without borders — providing patients worldwide with life-saving treatments after natural disasters and manmade calamities. I met men and women who are training medical professionals in places including Equatorial Guinea, Kosovo, Rwanda, Guatemala, Haiti and other locations so that they can save their own people.

My fact-finding visit to Israel showed what the future holds in terms of high-tech medicine. I met the very doctors at the forefront of breakthroughs in the treatment and early detection of Alzheimer’s and dementia. Their findings will benefit Americans thanks to deep bilateral medical collaboration. 

Not far off is a world where doctors will use robotics to perform heart surgeries on patients across the world. Soon, people will be able to carry instruments on their bodies enabling them to receive CAT scans and MRIs from the comfort of their own homes. It sounds like stuff from the science fiction novels, but it’s real and happening right now in Israel. The country is carving out a niche as a global medical pioneer.

Pivotal collaboration between the top Israeli doctors and leading American physicians is a win-win for both countries. And the relationship between the United States and Israel must remain strong and committed. We share the same core democratic values. As Vice President Pence recently said, “We stand with Israel because we believe in right over wrong, in good over evil and in liberty over tyranny.”

 
The atmosphere in Israel is crackling with an intensity that carries over into every aspect of life among its people, who demonstrate the skill with which Israel has skillfully built itself into an epicenter of medical innovation and bastion of hope.
 
Armstrong Williams (@ARightSide) is author of the book “Reawakening Virtues” and served as an adviser and spokesman for Dr. Ben Carson‘s 2016 presidential campaign.
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