DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.74 MB)
Applying a Bandage with Ointment to a Wound on Shabbat

The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 328) speaks of a kind of bandage or tourniquet that was used with medicinal ointment. The ointment would be applied to the bandage, and the bandage would then be placed on the wound to help it heal. Halacha forbids replacing such a bandage if it fell off on Shabbat. Although medical procedures that were begun before Shabbat are generally permitted on Shabbat, in this instance the Sages forbade replacing the bandage out of concern that one may sear the ointment before replacing the bandage, in violation of Shabbat.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef addresses in light of this Halacha the situation of a person with a wound covered by a dressing smeared with ointment which the doctor instructed him to change each day, or several times a day, in order to prevent infection. In light of the concern of an infection, Hacham Ovadia permits the patient in this case to prepare bandages with the ointment before Shabbat and then putting them on the wound on Shabbat as per the doctor’s instructions. Although the Shulhan Aruch forbids placing such a bandage on Shabbat – and even replacing one which had been placed before Shabbat – nevertheless, there is room to permit changing the dressing when there is a risk of infection, as long as the ointment was applied to the dressing before Shabbat.

Summary: It is forbidden on Shabbat to apply ointment to a bandage, and if such a bandage had been placed on a wound before Shabbat, it is forbidden to replace it if it fell off, or to put on a new one. If, however, the bandage needs to be changed to prevent infection, one may prepare bandages with ointment before Shabbat and then replace his bandage on Shabbat as needed.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Succot- The Mitzvah of Building the Succah
Succot- The Proper Way To Shake The Lulav in Halel
The Proper Time To Say Selichot
Customs of Elul
The Shofar as an Alarm Clock
Hatarat Nedarim – Annulling Vows Before Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur
Reciting Tehillim During the Month of Elul and During the Ten Days of Repentance
Some Laws and Customs for the Month of Elul
The Proper Procedure for Reciting Selihot Without a Minyan
Selihot – The Recitation of the “Yag Middot”
Selichot and Tikun Hasot
Reciting the “Yag Midot” Without a Minyan
Performing Teshuva Each Day; Repenting for Negative Character Traits
Can a Man Represent His Wife in Hatarat Nedarim?
The Structure of the Selihot Service; Health as a Reward for Charity
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found