Chaim Sheba (Hebrew: חיים שיבא; born 1908, died 10 July 1971) was an Israeli physician and the founder of Sheba Medical Center.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Chaim Sheba
חיים שיבא
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Chaim Sheba, 1948
Born
Chaim Scheiber

1908 (1908)
Frasin, Bukovina, Austria-Hungary (now Romania)
Died10 July 1971(1971-07-10) (aged 62–63)
EducationUniversity of Vienna
OccupationPhysician
Known forFounder of Sheba Medical Center
AwardsIsrael Prize (1968, Medicine)
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Chaim Sheba (right) escorts Eleanor Roosevelt during her visit to Sheba Medical Center
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Sheba in 1967, photo by Boris Carmi, (Meitar collection, National Library of Israel)

Biography

Chaim Scheiber (later Sheba) was born in Frasin, near Gurahumora, Bukovina, then in Austria-Hungary (now Suceava County, Romania), to the well known Scheiber Hasidic family, a descendant of the Hasidic court of Ruzhin. As a young child he studied in heder, a school for religious studies only. He transferred from there to the 8th grade in a secular school. Influenced by his grandfather, he began medical studies in Cernăuți and completed such studies in Vienna in December 1932. In the beginning of 1933, Sheba immigrated to Mandate Palestine.

Sheba died in 1971 of a heart attack.

Medical career

Until 1936, Sheba served as rural doctor and later in Beilinson Hospital. In 1942, he joined the Jewish Brigade as a doctor, joining the Haganah in 1947. From 1948 to 1950, he commanded the Medical Corps of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and became Director General of the Ministry of Health after leaving the IDF. He fulfilled this position until 1953, when he moved on to become the director of the Tel HaShomer Hospital (today Chaim Sheba Medical Center, named in his honor).[1]

In addition, from 1949 Sheba served as Professor of Medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He was one of the founders of the Tel Aviv University Medical School and served as a Vice-President of that University. He also helped to establish medical schools in Jerusalem and in Haifa.

During his tenure as Director General, Sheba was responsible for managing the tinea capitis outbreak. The standard treatment at the time involved X-raying the head area. This treatment was eventually discovered to be harmful, and the event became a source of controversy.

Awards and recognition

In 1968, Sheba was awarded the Israel Prize, in medicine.[2]

See also

References

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