DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 4.15 MB)
Taking A Blood Test on Shabbat

The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 328:48) rules that it is forbidden on Shabbat to extract blood from a wound, such as by pressing on the skin around the wound, or by tightly tying a piece of material near the wound to apply pressure. This is forbidden only "Mi’de’rabbanan" – on the level of Rabbinic enactment – as the Torah prohibition against extracting blood on Shabbat applies only when one needs the blood for some purpose.

Therefore, extracting blood to be examined in a laboratory would be forbidden on Shabbat on the level of Torah law. Since in this case the blood itself is needed, this constitutes a Biblical violation. Accordingly, Hacham Bension Abba Shaul (Israel, 1924-1998) writes that taking a blood test on Shabbat is forbidden except in the case of a seriously ill patient, where a potentially life-threatening risk is entailed.

Rabbi Moshe Ha’levi (Israel, 1961-2000), in his Menuhat Ahaba (vol. 3, 18:12), adds that in some situations, it would be permissible to ask a gentile to extract blood from a Jewish patient for a blood examination. This leniency would apply if there is a potential risk to the patient’s limb, if the patient is bedridden, or if he experiences pain throughout his body. In such cases, one may ask a gentile to perform the blood test. A Jew, however, may not extract blood from a patient for examination except in situations of potential risk to life.

Summary: It is forbidden to extract blood on Shabbat. Taking blood for a blood test is permitted on Shabbat only in situations of a patient in a potentially life-threatening situation. If the patient is not in danger, but he is quite ill, such as if he is bedridden, then one may ask a gentile to perform the blood test.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Importance of Giving Charity Before Praying; If One’s Prayer is Disrupted by Charity Collectors
The Yartzheit of the Ben Ish Hai
Feeding a Child Before Shaharit or Before Kiddush; Feeding a Child Dairy After He Ate Meat
May a Person Receive Two Aliyot in a Single Torah Reading?
Is it Permissible to Refer to One’s Father or Rabbi by His Name if He Adds a Title?
Calling Somebody With the Same Name as One’s Father
The Importance of Studying the Halachot of Respecting Parents
The Procedure When a Bet Din Announces Its Decision
Reciting Kaddish for a Parent
Ensuring Not to Receive a More Prominent Aliya Than One’s Father
Calling One’s Son in the Presence of His Father With the Same Name
Berit Mila – Eliyahu Ha’nabi’s Chair
Birkat Kohanim – The Unconditional Blessing
The Halachic Status of the Period Between Amud Ha’shahar and Sunrise
Can the Officiating Rabbi at a Wedding Serve as One of the Witnesses?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found