DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 6.51 MB)
Resuscitating an Unconscious Patient on Shabbat

The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 329) addresses the case of a collapsed building on Shabbat, Heaven forbid, and it is suspected that there are people buried in the rubble. It goes without saying that the rescuers must do anything they can to save the victims, and their efforts override the Shabbat prohibitions. The Shulhan Aruch writes that if the rescuers find a person in the rubble who is not moving, and they are uncertain whether the victim is alive, they should place a feather underneath his nostrils to see if it moves. If it does, then they know the patient is still alive, and the rescuers must do everything possible to help him. If the feather does not move, then the patient is presumed dead, and Shabbat may not be violated to retrieve his body from the rubble. The work to retrieve the body should be delayed until after Shabbat, because the Shabbat prohibitions are suspended for the purpose of saving a life, but not for lifting a corpse, Heaven forbid, from rubble.

However, Hacham Ovadia Yosef writes that this provision does not apply in today’s day and age, when modern medicine has come up with effective means of resuscitation. Even after a patient stops breathing, medics and physicians are able, in some situations, to resuscitate him and restore breathing. Therefore, if a patient stops breathing on Shabbat, Heaven forbid, the Shabbat prohibitions may still be violated in order to resuscitate him and treat him, until he is pronounced dead.

Significantly, Hacham Ovadia emphasizes that this applies even if the professionals figure that the patient will live for only a few minutes after resuscitation. Halacha treats "Hayeh Sha’a" – temporary life – with the same level of severity as life which can be restored for many years to come. The Torah views every moment of life as incalculably precious, and therefore, as important as Shabbat observance is, it is overridden by the effort to prolong a person’s life even for a few minutes. As long as the rescuers or medical professionals figure that there is a chance of prolonging a victim’s life even very briefly, they are allowed and in fact required to do everything necessary to do so, even if this entails violating the Shabbat laws.

Summary: A patient who is not breathing, Heaven forbid, on Shabbat may be resuscitated and treated as long as there is a chance of reviving him and prolonging his life, even for just several minutes.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Chanukah- The Proper Position When Lighting Chanukah Candles in the Synagogue
Chanukah- The Procedure for Torah Reading When Rosh Chodesh Tevet Falls on Shabbat
Chanukah- Birkat Roeh- When A Person Knows He Will Be Unable To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Does One Repeat The Berachot At Home If He Already Lit The Menorah With The Berachot In Shul
Chanukah- A Dignified Menorah
Chanukah- When Your Neighbor Does Not Have Enough Money To Buy Oil To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Rekindle or Light The Menorah After Lighting Shabbat Candles on Erev Shabbat
Chanukah- Is Al Ha’nisim Required In Arbit On The First Day Of Chanukah, Or In Musaf Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh
Chanukah- Hallel for Men and Women On Chanukah
Chanukah- The Proper Time for Lighting Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- The Traveler At Time of Menorah Lighting
Chanukah- Menorah Lighting in Shul
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Allow A Child to Light Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- 2 Halachot: Eating Dairy Products on Chanukah, and The Proper Procedure of Lighting Before and After Shabbat
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Answer To Other Berachot During Hallel
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found