MDA collected 263,945 blood units across 8,859 drives in 2025, including more than 44,000 first-time donors. By Shmuli Volkin, Jewish Breaking NewsMagen David Adom’s year-end snapshot paints a country living at emergency tempo: in 2025, MDA dispatched teams 1,383,026 times — roughly one launch every 22.8 seconds nationwide.Behind that pace is a constant stream into MDA’s 101 control rooms, where a call comes in about every 7.3 seconds and dispatch is executed in up to two seconds, according to MDA’s own data.It’s the kind of response speed that only exists when staffing, tech, and national readiness are built for pressure — and then tested for real.The operational load is rising where it hurts most: on Israel’s roads. MDA says its paramedics and EMTs treated 71,736 casualties in road traffic crashes — a 6% jump from the prior year — as national figures pointed to 2025 becoming one of the deadliest years for road fatalities in decades.MDA’s report also highlights the “force multiplier” Israelis don’t always see: roughly 39,200 volunteers and staff, including 16,500 youth volunteers and 18,000 “Life Guardians,” logging over 6.3 million volunteer hours. Director-General Eli Bin framed it simply: they worked “day and night… with dedication… from the heart.”That volunteer backbone has been reshaped by hard lessons since the Hamas-led October 7 massacre, when medics and ambulances came under fire and dispatchers stayed on the line with victims through unbearable moments.MDA says its “Magen Project” is training civilians and local emergency teams for the first critical minutes of an incident — including scenarios where communities are cut off by war, terror infiltration, or natural disaster.Blood is the other battlefield — and it’s getting tighter.MDA collected 263,945 blood units across 8,859 drives in 2025, including more than 44,000 first-time donors.But recent warnings in Israel have underscored how quickly stock can drop, with MDA urging the public to donate amid severe shortages that can disrupt surgeries and trauma care.Even the quieter numbers tell the story of a country preparing for the next shock: mass-casualty trailers and buses, bulletproof ambulances, helicopters for air evacuations, ECMO field capability, public defibrillators installed across communities, and specialized support like the national human milk bank supplying thousands of liters to fragile newborns.It’s not just a recap — it’s a map of what Israel’s home front had to become to keep saving lives at scale.The post Ambulance every 22 seconds: Israel logs over 1.38 million emergency call-outs as road deaths rise and blood supplies tighten appeared first on World Israel News.