![]() Dr. Ben Sedley, touring the Charlotte R. Bloomberg
Mother and
Annette Magnus. |
The teams he encountered, Dr. Sedley relates, “were able to offer therapy in Hebrew, Arabic, Russian, French, and English. The inpatient unit ran therapy groups comprised of Jews and Arabs, ultra-Orthodox and secular Jews, and immigrants from all around the world.”
Dr. Sedley, Senior Clinical Psychologist at
“I really enjoyed talking to the staff about how they are able to develop empathy with people from wildly different political views,” he relates, “--for example, a Jewish staff member and a Palestinian patient the day after a bus bombing, or a Palestinian psychiatrist working with Israeli families the day after being harassed by soldiers at a border crossing. None of the staff I spoke to found it difficult to separate people and politics. As Dr. Ben-Harosh said, all politics are left at the door and all clients are just people experiencing difficulties.”

Established in memory of Valda Knight, president of Hadassah New Zealand from 1996 until her death in 2007, the scholarship provides
He reports that he admired the flexibility Hadassah illustrates in meeting the therapeutic needs of each patient beyond dealing with the trauma incident. Hadassah has an effective screening process, he notes, which identifies those young people who are more likely to develop post-traumatic stress symptoms. Its health professionals ensure that the families are aware of what type of symptoms to watch for and who to contact if they see them materializing.
Dr. Sedley worked in
When asked what he would like others to know about the