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Sincerely,
Dr. Benjamin Gavish
Co-Founder and Chief Scientist – RESPeRATE
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More about Dr. Gavish
Dr. Benjamin Gavish is the inventor of InterCure's technologies. He co-founded the company in 1994, and is responsible for the company's research and development, patenting, regulatory applications, and the enrollment of the company's world-class Scientific Advisory Board.
Dr. Gavish has had numerous appointments, including the Katchalsky Postdoctorate Fellowship at the Weizmann Institute, a Fullbright Fellowship and Assistant Professorship at the University of Illinois, and an Allon Fellowship at the Hebrew University -- Hadassah Medical School. Throughout his career, he has concentrated his research activities in biophysics and biomedical engineering, with a particular focus on protein biophysics, ultrasound biophysics, small blood vessels, blood rheology, and non-invasive monitoring.
Dr. Gavish is currently working on the mechanisms associated with the therapeutic effect of breathing exercises and on new characterizations of blood vessel properties using non-invasive measurements. He has numerous patents, mainly in biomedical engineering, and has published more than 40 scientific papers, mostly in leading journals of different branches of science and technology. Dr. Gavish has served as the President and the Secretary of the Israeli Society for Microcirculation, and is a member of the International, American and the Israeli Societies of Hypertension and the American Heart Association Council for High Blood Pressure Research. Dr. Gavish received his Ph.D. in Solid State Physics from Tel Aviv University in 1974.

"People who used the slow-breathing device for 15 minutes a day for two months saw their blood pressure drop 10 to 15 points..."

"Mounting research shows that exercises to slow breathing can help reduce elevated blood pressure..."

"That may look like a Walkman the man at right is using, but the Resperate doesn't pump out pulse-raising songs."

"People with hypertension who practice slow breathing with the aid of a regulating device find their blood pressure drops. "