At the peak of the pandemic some 1,200 people were in serious condition.
The Israeli Health Ministry reported last week:
Last week, Hadassah-University Medical Centre announced it had closed its last COVID-19 internal medicine ward and only six COVID patients remain in the hospital in a COVID-19 intensive care unit.
Hadassah Hospital saw more coronavirus patients throughout the pandemic than any other Israeli hospital. Jerusalem has large Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) and Arab communities who suffered severely from the virus.
Hadassah admitted 4,500 patients last year, 10% of whom were admitted to intensive care and on some days the hospital cared for 150 COVID-19 patients.
Furthermore, Sheba Medical Centre announced that its underground parking lot, which served as the hospital’s critical care coronavirus unit, had returned to its original purpose. At the height of the third wave, there were nearly 40 critical care patients treated in the unit.
Thanks to the current low number of cases, since Sunday, Israelis are no longer required to wear masks outdoors, while children in all grades have been allowed to return to classrooms full-time without capsules.
Editor’s notes:
This article was written by Rossella Tercatin and Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman and first appeared in the Jerusalem Post on Monday 19 April 2021.
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