The workers' health fund in Eretz Israel: Kupat Holim, 1911-1937

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

The first study to research the history of the health funds established by Jewish laborers in Israel.
The history of Kupat Holim, the health organization of workers in Israel, began at the 2nd Convention of Jewish agricultural workers in Judea in December 1911. Due to the lack of health services within the economic means of the workers, and the refusal of the farmer-employers to extend health services to their employees, the Jewish agricultural workers in Eretz-Israel -- at that time, a distant province of the far-flung Ottoman empire -- decided to establish a workers' health fund [kupat holim in Hebrew]. In the years 1912-15, two funds similar to the ones in Judea were also established in the north and center of the country. In the first years, the health funds did not provide workers with medical assistance on their own. Only in 1913, with the outbreak of the First World War, were the health funds transformed from insuring organizations into ones that provided medical assistance services themselves.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherUniversity of Rochester Press
Number of pages360
ISBN (Electronic)9781580466134
ISBN (Print)9781580461221
StatePublished - Nov 2002

Publication series

NameRochester studies in medical history
PublisherUniversity of Rochester Press
Volume2
ISSN (Print)1526-2715

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