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ISRAEL21c

ISRAEL21c was founded in 2001, in the wake of the Second Intifada, to broaden public understanding of Israel beyond typical portrayals in the mainstream media. The organization’s founders – Israeli-American technology executives – understood the great power of the Internet and developed a first-of-its kind online product with global appeal and reach.

Most Recent Articles by ISRAEL21c:

Has Israel just found the cure for Covid?

Dr. Nadir Arber in his lab where EXO-CD24 was developed. Photo courtesy of Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterEven with Israel’s world-leading rollout of Covid-19 vaccinations, drugs to treat Covid patients are in desperate need across the world. Two such drugs developed in Israel show great promise in clinical trials: EXO-CD24 and Allocetra.
- Thursday, February 11, 2021

What the world can learn about immunity from Israel’s vaccine rollout

What the world can learn about immunity from Israel’s vaccine rolloutMore than 1.3 million Israelis have already received both doses of the Covid-19 vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech. The extraordinarily fast and organized vaccination campaign in Israel is unmatched per capita anywhere in the world. By design, this fast rollout is providing Pfizer – and the rest of us – with the first critical real-world data on brand-new mRNA vaccines.
- Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Recycling single-use plastic with bacteria

Recycling single-use plastic with bacteriaEvery year, more than 300 million tons of plastic are produced worldwide, and around half of the produced materials are designed for single-use purposes. In fact, more plastic has been produced over the last decade than throughout the whole last century. Its inexpensive cost, its rigid and flexible properties, and its wide versatility have facilitated and normalized a culture conditioned to waste, thereby degrading and polluting the environment.
- Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Scientists develop new gene therapy for deafness

Delivering healthy genetic material into the inner ear cells of mice with a genetic defect that causes deafness enables the cells to function normally, according to a new study from Tel Aviv University (TAU). The novel treatment prevented the gradual deterioration of hearing in these mice. It could lead to a breakthrough in treating children born with various mutations that eventually cause deafness. The study, led by Prof. Karen Avraham of the Department of Human Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry at TAU’s Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Sagol School of Neuroscience, was published in EMBO Molecular Medicine on December 22.
- Saturday, January 9, 2021

From aging to chronic wounds, is hyperbaric oxygen a cure-all?

From aging to chronic wounds, is hyperbaric oxygen a cure-all?It’s easy to see why Prof. Shai Efrati has been flooded with inquiries since the publication of his study showing that hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) can reverse aging at the cellular level. Is this really the fountain of youth? ISRAEL21c had a Zoom chat with the Israeli physician to find out more about HBOT’s wide-ranging benefits. Efrati explains that in HBOT, patients breathe in high-pressure oxygen at various concentrations through a mask or a hood, while seated inside a pressure chamber, to stimulate
- Saturday, January 9, 2021

Microbiome transplants can reprogram immune system to attack tumors

Microbiome transplants can reprogram immune system to attack tumorsChanging the gut microbiome can reprogram the immune system to attack malignant tumors, according to results of a unique clinical trial at Sheba Medical Center in Israel. The results were published in the peer-reviewed journal Science by a research team led by senior GI oncologist Dr. Ben Boursi, senior oncologist Dr. Gal Markel and MD-PhD student Erez Baruch.
- Saturday, January 9, 2021

You can kill Covid with a flick of a switch, study shows

As the world continues to race toward a vaccine for Covid-19, new Israeli research shows that the humble light bulb could become a major player in the fight against the pandemic. Researchers have discovered that coronavirus can be killed quickly, efficiently and cheaply using ultraviolet light-emitting diodes, or UV LED lights. In a study recently published in the Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology researchers found the optimal wavelength for killing the coronavirus is 267 nanometers.
- Friday, December 25, 2020

Study shows hyperbaric oxygen can reverse the aging process

Study shows hyperbaric oxygen can reverse the aging processHyperbaric oxygen treatments can stop the aging of blood cells and even reverse the aging process in healthy aging adults, according to a recently published study from scientists at Tel Aviv University (TAU) and Shamir Medical Center. The researchers found that a unique protocol of high-pressure oxygen treatments in a pressure chamber can reverse two major processes associated with aging: the shortening of telomeres (protective regions at both ends of every chromosome) and the accumulation of old, malfunctioning (senescent) cells.
- Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Scientists grow fresh dates from a 6th BC seed

Scientists grow fresh dates from a 6th BC seedMazal tov to Hannah and Methuselah on their 111 miracle babies! The proud parents are date palms grown from ancient seeds uncovered in archeological excavations in Israel. These dates, recently picked at the Arava Institute at Kibbutz Ketura in southern Israel, are a type that hasn’t been tasted since the times of Jesus and the Maccabees.
- Monday, September 28, 2020

Are we heading for a cyber pandemic?

The Covid-19 pandemic has turned Israel’s world-respected cybersecurity professionals into frontline soldiers in a fight against what some see as a looming cyber pandemic. Governments, companies, medical facilities and individuals are all potential victims of malware, identity theft and data stealing.
- Wednesday, September 2, 2020

‘Mama’ drone saves life of endangered Israeli vulture chick

tend’s drone drops food to an orphaned vulture chick in IsraelAn endangered vulture chick stranded on a cliff ledge in the Judean desert became the unlikely poster child for the Israeli drone industry. Griffon vultures are monogamous and increasingly rare. Hundreds of pairs could be found in the skies over Israel until the 1950s. Today, fewer than 60 pairs remain. So, when a chick was born in February to the happy pair K74 (female) andT49 (male), conservationists were overjoyed.
- Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Huge and significant biblical storage center unearthed in Jerusalem

huge-and-significant-biblical-storage-center-unearthed-in-jerusalemOne of the largest and most important collections of seal impressions ever uncovered in Israel were recently unearthed in a Jerusalem neighborhood in what appears to have been a biblical storage center. The digs, carried out in the Arnona neighborhood in southern Jerusalem by the Israel Antiquities Authority, revealed a large structure built of concentric ashlar walls. Inside were 120 jar handles bearing seal impressions in ancient Hebrew script.
- Friday, July 31, 2020

Vitamin D helps us fight Covid-19, major study finds

Vitamin D helps us fight Covid-19, major study findsA low level of vitamin D in blood plasma appears to be an independent risk factor for Covid-19 infection and hospitalization, say scientists from Israeli HMO Leumit Health Services and the Azrieli Faculty of Medicine of Bar-Ilan University. The researchers came to their conclusion using real-world data and an Israeli cohort of 782 Covid-19 positive patients and 7,025 Covid-19 negative patients.
- Friday, July 31, 2020

4 Israeli inventions that purify the air of Covid-19

4 Israeli inventions that purify the air of Covid-19Remember when pollution was our worst respiratory worry? Now, scientists say airborne virus particles may be the main cause of Covid-19 infections. In the face of new evidence, the World Health Organization has changed its tune about the virus not being transmitted through air.
- Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Breakthrough finds leftover cancer cells in real time during surgery

Breakthrough finds leftover cancer cells in real time during surgeryCombining medicine, engineering and computer science, a new approach from Israel can detect — in real time — any cancer cells left in the abdominal cavity after a malignant tumor is removed surgically. The breakthrough comes from a research team at Tel Aviv University’s Zimin Institute for Engineering Solutions Advancing Better Lives, led by Prof. Noam Shomron and doctoral student Artem Danilevsky.
- Wednesday, July 22, 2020

First in-human trial of synthetic cornea starts in Israel

First in-human trial of synthetic cornea starts in IsraelThe first-in-human implantation of the revolutionary CorNeat KPro synthetic cornea has been approved for 10 corneally blind patients at Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva. CorNeat KPro was developed by CorNeat Vision of Ra’anana. The implant is designed to replace deformed, scarred or opacified corneas and is expected to fully rehabilitate the vision of corneally blind patients immediately following implantation.
- Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Unique hydro-print tech lets you Photoshop your actual body

If you want to banish a blemish or add a fanciful flourish to your photograph, that’s easily done with Photoshop. It’s not as easily done on your actual body. Israeli photographer and industrial designer Guy Aon aims to change that. Aon’s tentatively titled BodyPiece technology could revolutionize a broad range of sectors, from makeup to prosthetics to fashion.
- Wednesday, July 1, 2020

One new drug may treat both Covid-19 and Alzheimer’s

“By the age of 80, one in three people develops Alzheimer’s. I’m trying to move the curve to 85 or 90 or maybe beyond.” A novel Alzheimer’s disease treatment now in advanced Phase 3 clinical trials could also prove effective in treating lung inflammation caused by Covid-19.
- Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Ultraviolet light can reduce Covid transmission indoors

One of the biggest questions facing us these days is how we can make our indoor spaces safe from Covid-19 contagion. Studies have shown that we are far more likely to catch the virus in closed indoor spaces like offices, schools, public transport, museums and health centers rather than outdoors.
- Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Sourdough: The tasty silver lining to the corona crisis

Sourdough: The tasty silver lining to the corona crisisAs a reviewer of cookbooks, I can say unequivocally that most English-language cookbooks these days are focused around dieting fads, with keto, Paleo, whole 30, vegan and ultra-healthy eating at the top of that list. I’ve read through more gluten-free recipes than I care to admit. It takes something of epic proportions to unexpectedly knock us all to our feet again and press the reset button on the current state of our cultural trends. Something to swing the pendulum back the other way a bit.
- Wednesday, June 10, 2020

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