These upscale Israeli hotels are only for new moms and babies
Published February 2, 2017
In the lobby, a woman smiles as she lounges with her husband on a burnished leather sofa, admiring a table of gifts set before her. At the front desk, a staffer in a crisp black suit clicks away at her keyboard. In the dining room, waiters are preparing a buffet lunch with bowls piled high with produce, local cheeses, marinated olives and fresh fish.
The 26-room hotel — its beds fluffed with down pillows and plush duvets, and sparkling en-suites with gleaming tile, rainforest shower heads and elegantly arranged toiletries from the Dead Sea — is so popular that it’s completely booked nearly every day. In every room, a woman luxuriates in privacy and comfort. And at every woman’s side, often in a plastic wheeled bassinet, lies a newborn boy or girl.
Welcome to Baby Lis, a private hotel adjacent to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv that caters exclusively to new mothers and their newborns.
There are four such maternity hotels in Israel — better known to pregnant women and new parents as “milonit,” or “baby hotels.” The hotels are part of a unique network of maternal support and pampering that sets Israel apart from many other countries when it comes to the treatment of postpartum women. Israeli mothers enjoy three months of government-mandated maternity leave and new legislation allows paternal leave for their partners.
But for those who choose to and are able to pay extra, a few nights in the milonit after giving birth help launch women into new motherhood with an extra dose of luxury.
“I want the women to feel like they are staying at Carmel Forest Spa, but with a baby,” says Baby Lis manager Natalie Hurvitz, referring to the exclusive northern Israeli resort known for, among other things, hosting Bar Refaeli’s 2015 nuptials. “I just want them to be calm, for everything to smell good.”
Israel’s three other milonit are Hadassah Baby hotel in Jerusalem, which is run by and sits on the campus of Hadassah Ein Kerem; Baby Assaf, which is run by the Assaf Harofeh Medical Center in Tzrifin; and Sheba Baby, which sits on the first floor of the obstetrics department at Chaim Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer and is managed by the hospital.
Sheba Baby, which opened more than 17 years ago, was Israel’s pioneering baby hotel. At its inception, it was also a private hotel. Baby Assaf, meanwhile, is the youngest of the bunch, having opened in 2013. Each hotel is different — Alexandra Foigel, the manager of Baby Assaf, for example, said her property offers an experience more akin to a quaint bed and breakfast than a posh resort.
“We only have 17 rooms, and our atmosphere is like a tzimmer,” Foigel said, referring to the cabin-style guest houses that Israelis flock to for countryside vacations.
“Our rooms feel less like a hotel room and more like a home,” she added. “We have wonderful porches with great breezes, every woman gets personal attention and care, and the atmosphere here is small, loving and homey.”
Health care in Israel is state-sponsored and mandatory, and full coverage comes at a low monthly fee. Every citizen must pay into one of the nation’s four health maintenance organizations, and the government-designated “health basket,” by law, demands that all four HMOs fully cover the cost of a hospital birth, as well as basic prenatal care.
But many Israelis opt to pay slightly higher monthly fees, generally between $11 and $27 per month, for supplemental coverage, referred to in terms like “gold,” “platinum” and “complete” by the health-care organizations. These packages include perks like subsidized acupuncture and expanded prescription plans, as well as an option to be reimbursed for part of the cost of a stay at a milonit. (The reimbursement option can also be applied to services like genetic testing, amniocentesis and postpartum care.)
Most supplemental insurance will cover the cost of one night at Baby Lis, or two at the less expensive hotels. The average stay is two to three nights, although some women stay as long as a week, often asking that family members contribute toward the cost in lieu of traditional baby gifts.
“I stayed two nights, but I would have stayed three or four if someone had gifted it to us,” said Rachel Schonwald, a Texas native who now lives in Tel Aviv. When it came time to deliver her son Gilad last spring, she chose to give birth at Ichilov in large part because of Baby Lis.
For Schonwald — like many of Israeli women interviewed for this article — the choice to shell out extra shekels in exchange for postpartum pampering was well worth it.
Schonwald’s son was re-hospitalized with jaundice after they had been released from the hospital and were ensconced at Baby Lis, and the experience was beyond therapeutic, she said.
“It would have been so much harder in the maternity ward, not have this oasis to escape to when he was put back in the hospital,” Schonwald said. “The food and the bed were the best, and that’s really all that matters right after you’ve given birth.”
It’s a model that’s rarely seen in other countries. In the United States, VIP birthing suites offer celebrities and A-listers an experience that pairs spa treatments and catered gluten-free food with epidurals and water baths. In Asia, luxe “maternity hotels” transfer the entire childbirth experience into a five-star suite, giving the ultra-rich the option to give birth amid Egyptian cotton and goose down.
But the Israeli model is unique. Women give birth in the maternity ward under the care of doctors, spend a night or two recovering in a hospital ward, and then can either head home with their bundles of joy or walk next door to the hotel designed for postpartum women.
While the four hotels vary in amenities and price points, they share some distinctive features: All rooms are private and, while the hospital’s nurses are on hand for administering pain medications and doctors are always on call in case of emergencies, they don’t make rounds. That means women recovering from the intense physical challenge of delivering a baby are offered the ultimate gift: sleep.
Additionally, there are two or three full buffet meals, and lectures on how to bathe your baby and what to expect in the first few weeks. There are lactation consultants who offer seminars and assistance. The rooms feature rocking chairs and changing tables, and the beds are outfitted with a remote control that can raise the bottom half of the mattress (to help postpartum mothers reduce swollen ankles).
For Tal Hirschbien Spector, 36, a mother of two who lives in Ness Tziona, that pampering was worth the price when she delivered her younger child, Lielle, four months ago. Spector delivered at Tel Hashomer hospital, a decision, she said, that was based in part by the presence of the milonit.
“With Yonatan I was awake for three days,” she said, referring to the birth of her older child. “This time I got two full nights of sleep before coming home, and it put me in a better mindset as a mother.”