DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.27 MB)
Applying Ice to Reduce Swelling on Shabbat

Rav Shlomo Miller (contemporary), in his work Shabbat Shlomo (p. 230; listen to audio recording for precise citation), addresses the question of whether one may apply ice to an injury in order to reduce swelling on Shabbat. He writes that this is permissible, for two reasons. Firstly, the Halachic authorities generally permit procedures on Shabbat that serve to merely limit the infection, as opposed to curing it. This leniency is cited (in Sha’ar Ha’siyun) in the name of the Hayeh Adam (Rav Abraham Danzig of Vilna, 1748-1820). Therefore, since the ice does not heal the injury, but merely limits the swelling, it may be applied on Shabbat.

Secondly, Rav Miller adds, the Rabbinic enactment forbidding medicine on Shabbat was made out of the concern of "Shehikat Samemanim" – that people might grind herbs to produce medication. As such, some authorities understood that this prohibition is limited to procedures that normally involve "Samemanim" – actual medicine. It would not apply to the application of ice to reduce swelling, as this type of medical care does not ordinarily include the use of "Samemanim."

Summary: It is permissible to apply ice to an injury on Shabbat to reduce swelling.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May A Seller Compensate For Partial Defect Or Must He Issue Full Refund?
Does A Purchaser Have The Right To Return A Defective Item
Damages Caused to a Car That is Blocking a Driveway or a Street
The Status of a Witness Who Received Money to Testify
Which Transgressions Render a Person Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Why are Women Disqualified From Serving as Witnesses?
May a Sinner Serve as a Witness If He Thought He Was Doing a Misva When He Sinned?
The Disqualification of “Shameless” People From Serving as Witnesses
Who is Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Watching a Lost Item Until it is Returned to its Owner
Who Keeps Money That is Found in a Private Backyard, or in a Store?
Returning and Claiming Lost Items
Hashabat Abeda – The Obligation to Return Lost Objects
Reading “Shenayim Mikra Ve’ehad Targum”
The Importance of Avoiding Anger
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found