DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 3.67 MB)
Taking Preventative Medication on Shabbat

Although as a rule it is forbidden to take medication on Shabbat, one whose condition requires him to lie down due to his discomfort is allowed to take medicine. The Sages did not apply their enactment to a person who experiences such discomfort that he must lie down, and so such a person is permitted to take any medication he needs to feel better. The prohibition applies only to those experiencing mild discomfort who can still go about and do not need to lie down.

An interesting question arises in the case of a person with a certain condition that requires him to take preventative medication in order to avoid debilitating discomfort that would require him to lie down. Meaning, the patient feels fully healthy now, but if he does not take his medication on Shabbat, he will experience considerable discomfort which he would need to go to bed in order to alleviate. Is such a person allowed to take his medication preemptively, before the symptoms occur, or must he wait until he experiences the discomfort before taking the medication?

Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Israel, 1910-1995), in Shulhan Shlomo (328:24; listen to audio recording for precise citation), writes that such a patient has the status of a "Nofel Le’mishkab" – an ill patient who needs to lie down – and may therefore take his medication. He writes this also in his Minhat Shelomo, noting that clearly there is no reason at all to force this person to wait until he suffers pain and discomfort.

The work Nishmat Shabbat suggests drawing proof to this ruling from the Halacha permitting asking a non-Jew to light the fireplace on Shabbat if one’s house is cold (Shulhan Aruch, Orah Haim 276). The reason is that all people are considered "sick" with respect to the cold, and therefore, just as Halacha permits asking a gentile to perform Melacha (forbidden activity) for the sake of an ill patient, likewise, one may ask a gentile to light the fireplace so the house would not be cold. Even if the house is still comfortable, one may ask a gentile to light the fireplace if he anticipates the house becoming cold. Rather than wait until the temperature becomes uncomfortably low, one is allowed to ask a non-Jew already now to light the fireplace. By the same token, then, it should be permissible to take medication before one develops serious discomfort, and he does not have to wait until he suffers pain and discomfort before taking the medication.

This is also the ruling of Rav Shlomo Miller (contemporary), in his Shabbat Shlomo, where he adds that this applies even if the discomfort would surface only after Shabbat. Meaning, if a person knows that he will feel well throughout the rest of Shabbat, but will begin feeling serious discomfort after Shabbat, he may take his medication on Shabbat as a preventative measure to avoid feeling pain and discomfort after Shabbat.

Summary: It is permissible to take medication on Shabbat if one’s condition requires him to lie down to alleviate his discomfort, and one may also take medication preemptively if he knows that otherwise he would experience this level of discomfort.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah – The Time for Bedikat Hames
Pesah- The Procedure for Bedikat Hamez
Pesah – Must One Search for Hames in the Areas Containing the Hames That He Sells?
The Special Reading on the First Thirteen Days of Nissan
Pesah – Is it Permissible to Eat Egg Masa on Pesah
Passover- Ve'higadeta Le'bincha - Sitting Next To One's Father-Son During The Hagaddah
Must One Perform Bedikat Hametz if He Goes Away for Pesah?
Pesah – Reciting Me’en Sheba on Pesah Night When it Falls on Shabbat
The Reasons for the Custom of Ta'anit Bechorim
Passover- Avoiding The Problem of A Drop of Hametz In Kosher for Pesach Food
Shabbat Hagadol
Pesah – Selling Hametz in a Case Where One Spends Pesah in a Different Time Zone
Pesah – The Second of the Four Cups of Wine
Laws and Customs of Ereb Pesah
Kimha De’pischa – Donating Charity to the Poor Before Pesah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found