Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic
Medicine Initiative
Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic
Medicine Initiative
Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic
Medicine Initiative
Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic Medicine Initiative
Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic Medicine Initiative
Join Psifas
The Israeli National Genomic Medicine Initiative

Join the national mission to accelerate research and medical breakthroughs, and help us develop new methods for disease prevention, identification, and early treatment.

Step 1

Join by signing a form that gives your consent to share your medical information with the national medical database. This database will reflect the diversity of the Israeli population

Step 2

Provide a simple blood sample that will be sent to labs where genome sequencing will be performed. This will help us establish a secure, unidentified medical and genetic database

Step 3

The hundreds of thousands of volunteers who join the project will be partners in a national research platform that will enable faster, more targeted research – essential for helping everyone to lead
a healthier life

“Today, we only treat diseases many years after they have taken root in our bodies and once they have already started to display various symptoms. This is far too late! One of Psifas’s goals is to identify these diseases during the incubation stage, when there’s still a chance to stop it in its tracks.”

Prof. Gabriel Barbash – Psifas Director

“Today, we only treat diseases many years after they have taken root in our bodies and once they have already started to display various symptoms. This is far too late! One of Psifas’s goals is to identify these diseases during the incubation stage, when there’s still a chance to stop it in its tracks.”

Prof. Gabriel Barbash – Psifas Director

About

Psifas is a national project for the promotion of health in Israel, with the joint participation of the Ministries of Health, Treasury, Defense, Education, and the CHE (Council for Higher Education) and the PBC (Planning and Budgeting Committee), the National Digital Agency and the Innovation Authority. It is managed through inter-university cooperation and currently operates in partnerships with Clalit Health Services and the Rabin, Carmel, Soroka, Lynn, HaEmek, and the Sheba, Ichilov, Wolfson and Hadassah Medical Centers. Within Israel, the project is overseen by the Privacy Protection Authority and the National Cyber Directorate. The list of partners is updated periodically.

Through the establishment of a national research data system that combines medical and genetic information, we will be able to identify chronic diseases like diabetes, liver and kidney disease, cancer and stroke, and treat them more effectively.

The decision to launch this project has put the State of Israel at the forefront of modern healthcare, shoulder to shoulder with the world’s most advanced countries, such as the USA and the UK, which decided to establish large medical and genetic databases for the advancement of medical science.

How can I join Psifas?

The Psifas initiative is currently focused on recruiting volunteers only for specific, targeted research studies, to which participants are referred by their treating physicians who have received approval to recruit for that study.

After your participation is approved, a blood sample will be taken and sent for genetic sequencing (WGS).
Your clinical information and genetic sequencing results will be combined and stored in a research database, after all identifying details are removed, ensuring that your data cannot be personally linked to you.

Your Information is Secured

The development of the database will be performed while maintaining confidentiality and protecting your privacy. All data processing and analysis will be conducted solely on unidentified information.  No researcher throughout the entire chain of information and data processing will have access to your identifying information.

Write us here what you would like to know

In the study, we will perform sequencing (testing) of all genes in the DNA.

Only genetic changes whose detection indicates the need to report to a medical authority results in changes in follow-up or treatment will be reported to volunteers. The list of reported genes is based on the American College of Medical Genetics (see the following link): https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/docs/acmg/

Researchers from academia and industry, universities, medical institutions, commercial companies, and the Ministry of Health will be able to use the database in order to discover new ways to diagnose and treat diseases. All researchers will be subject to prior approval by the Ministry of Health’s Helsinki Committee and then approval of the study by a Psifas committee.

In the future, it is possible that we will offer volunteers from particular communities the option to join follow-up studies focused on groups that are especially susceptible to certain diseases or medical conditions, as one example.