Amid critical doctor shortage, Israel launches international program to bring 2,000 physicians by 2029

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Osnat Steiman examines a patient in the geriatric ward of Ichilov Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. (Larry Luxner)

TEL AVIV — Dr. Olivia Keller-Baruch had long dreamed of working as a doctor in Israel.

Originally from Montreal, she knew making the move would require some adjustments. Her Hebrew skills needed work, she was aware physician salaries in Israel differ from those in North America and she assumed navigating Israeli bureaucracy would take time.

But when Keller-Baruch, 29, immigrated recently after finishing her residency at the University of Missouri, she received assistance that smoothed the path to getting credentialed in Israel and quickly finding a job in the Emergency Department at Ichilov Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.

She’s also had some amazing experiences she never could have imagined in her native Canada. In mid-October last year, Keller-Baruch’s ER team was part of the welcoming committee that received many of the 20 Israeli hostages upon their release after two years in Hamas captivity in Gaza.

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