Translated from the Hebrew by Uriah F. Cheskin & Yitzchak Pechenick
The fundamental
principles regarding the practice of medicine are based on sources in the
Bible. At first glance, a fatalistic view may seem warranted: the course of the
illness and its effects are predetermined by the Almighty without any possibility
of human intervention. Since both life and death, and health and illness, are
in God’s hands, the physician has neither the right nor any poss- ibility of
healing the sick. Rather, since everything is predeter- mined by God, to try to
outwit the divine decree is to rebel.
But one who looks more deeply at the sources in the Bible,
Mishna, Talmud, early and later authorities, and in halachic literature will
see that this fatalistic view is completely rejected in Jewish thought and
practice. On the contrary, the physician serves as a loyal agent of the
Almighty in healing the sick by means of the various medicines the Almighty
puts at his disposal, his wisdom, and his medical knowledge and experience.
Looking to divine assistance, the physician should proceed with a sense that he
is carrying out a mitzvah. When he operates in accordance with the best
principles of medicine, he should not fear lest he bring about an accident or
injury. The physician is not only granted the right to heal; he is obliged. One
who refrains from doing so is compared to one who spills blood.
This essay presents a compendium of the traditional Jewish
approach to medicine.
· “God healed Avimelech”
(Gen. 20:17)
· “For I am God, your
healer” (Exod.15:26)
· “I will remove illness
from your midst” (Exod. 23:25)
· “Please, God, please
heal her” (Num. 12:13)
· “I have smitten and I
will heal” (Deut. 32:39)
· “Cure me God, and I
will be healed” (Jer. 17:14)
· “I will restore health
to you and I will heal you of your wounds” (Jer. 30:17)
· “For he makes sore and
binds up” (Job 5:18)
· “Heal me, God, for my
bones shudder” (Ps. 6:3)
· “O Lord, my God, I
cried to you and you have healed me” (Ps. 30:3)
· “The healer of all your
diseases” (Ps. 103:3)
· “He sends His word and
He heals them” (Ps. 107:20)
· “He heals the
brokenhearted” (Ps. 147:3)
· “And man became a
living soul” (Gen. 2:8)
Rabbi Yossi explains: Sustain the soul which I gave you! (Taanit
22b)
· “He shall pay for his victim’s period of
incapacitation, and he shall cause him to be thoroughly healed” (Exod. 21:19)
Rabbi Yishmael said: This verse contains the authorization
for physicians to heal. (Brachot 60a; Bava Kama 85a)
· “Observe my laws and my judgments; which, if a
person does, he shall live through them” (Lev.18:5)
A physician who heals and sustains a patient is fulfilling
the mitzvah of maintaining bodily health contained in this verse (Rabbi Solomon
ben Aderet, Sefer Issur V’hetter, chapter 60, sections 8-9).
· “Do not stand idly by the blood of your
brother... and you shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Lev.19:16,18)
This verse requires a physician to provide medical
assistance to save and ease the pains of a sick person who is suffering or in
danger. (Responsa Tzitz Eliezer, pt. 15, sec. 38)
· “And your brother shall live with you”
(Lev.25:36)
The physician who heals the body of a sick person, or
relieves his bodily suffering, fulfills this mitzvah. (Sefer Issur V’Hetter,
loc. cit.)
· “Take great heed for yourselves” (Deut. 4:15)
The physician who heals a sick person fulfills the mitzvah
contained in this verse. (Sefer Issur V’Hetter, loc. cit.)
· “If you see your neighbor’s ox or his sheep
straying, do not close your eyes to them. You shall surely return them to your
brother.. and return it to him.. and so shall you do for every lost item
belonging to your brother which he loses and you find.” (Deut. 22:1-3)
The plain meaning of the verse refers to returning a lost
item. But from the repetition of the words “return them” and “return it to him”
our Talmudic sages interpret the verse as referring also to a “return” of his
body (to health; Sanhedrin 73a)
· “You may not hide yourself” (Deut. 22:3)
Just as the finder of a lost object is not permitted to
ignore it, but must take the trouble to return the object to its owner(s), so
must a physician return “lost” bodily capacity to the patient by curing his
malady. He must not try to evade his responsibility and hide from the sick
person. (Responsa Tzitz Eliezer, loc. cit.)
It is reported of King Assa: “And even in his illness he
did not seek God, but rather the physicians” (II Chronicles 16:12).
This verse criticizes the conduct of King Assa because he
should have sought God and prayed that He heal him. Instead, he sought a cure
from the physicians. On the basis of this verse, some believe that one should
not be cured by a physician. Rather, one should beseech God for mercy. According
to this view turning to the physicians is considered a sin.
But the intent of the text may well be understood
otherwise. King Assa was punished for seeking out and relying on physicians
alone, to the exclusion of God. When a sick person trusts in God and prays to
Him for a cure by means of a physician, it is certainly permissible to seek
medical assistance. This is also the case when the malady has come at the hands
of God.[1]
“In those days King Hezekiah became mortally sick. And the
prophet Isaiah, son of Amotz, came to him and said, ‘Thus said God, set your
house in order because you are going to die, and not live.’... and he prayed to
God... and Hezekiah wept profusely... ‘Thus said God, the God of David your
father: I have heard your prayer, I have seen your tears and I will heal you.
Three days hence, you will go up to God’s house and I will add fifteen years to
your life’” (II Kings 20:1-16.)
“King Hezekiah hid away the Book of Remedies and the Sages
praised, i.e. concurred with him.”[2]
Maimonides writes that some believe that the Book of
Remedies was the work of King Solomon in which remedies for all types of
maladies were recorded. When King Hezekiah noticed that people were no longer
relying on God to heal them but rather on the Book of Remedies, he hid it away.
Maimonides rejects this interpretation believing it to be
somewhat fanciful. It is inappropriate to attribute to Hezekiah this sort of
foolishness, and it is impossible that the sages of his generation assented to
such an action. Maimonides draws an analogy to a hungry person who is obligated
to eat in order to allay his hunger, he should not rely on God for this. He
should eat and thank God that He provided food to satisfy him. Similarly, a
sick person is obligated to take medicine in order to recover, and
simultaneously thank God for providing him with the medicine to cure his
illness.
In Maimonides’ interpretation, King Hezekiah hid away the
Book of Remedies because it also contained many methods of preparing lethal
drugs along with effective antidotes for these drugs. But the advent of unfit
physicians who became immoral and used these drugs to kill prompted Hezekiah to
hide the Book of Remedies.[3]
“Happy is he who is thoughtful of the wretched, God will
save him on an evil day.” (Ps. 41:2)
It might be argued that since God has meted out an illness
and has confined the sick person to bed, no one should try to seek medical
assistance for him. But this is incorrect, as King David said, “Happy is he who
is thoughtful of the wretched.” The “wretched” refers to the sick person who,
even if wealthy, is in need of a cure. Accordingly, the one who is “thoughtful
of the wretched” is the wise physician and God blesses him.
“God will save him on an evil day.” Even though God
himself confined the sick person to his sickbed, it is His will that the
physician try to heal him, and help free him from his illness.[4]
“He found him in a desert land, and in a desolate, howling
wilderness; he encompassed him, he instructed him, he protected him as the
apple of his eye. Like an eagle stirring up its nest, brooding over its young,
spreading its wings, taking them, bearing them on its pinions.” (Deut.
32:10-11.)
In the Zohar, a homily based on this verse is cited
from the writings of one Kartinahan the Physician. It is addressed to fellow
physicians: The person bedridden by illness, unaware of where to seek a cure,
is like one lost in a dark and deathly wilderness, like an isolated prisoner.
What should the physician who finds him do?
“Encompass him” – Do him a good turn: Hebrew, “turn” (as
in “a good turn”) is based on the same root letters as “encompass” to guard the
patient against potential harm caused by the illness.
“He instructed him” – Understand him in order that his
illness not press heavily upon him. Here we have another Hebrew word-play:
“understand” is based on the same root letters as “instruct.”
“He will protect him as the apple of His eye” – in order
that he not err, the physician is obligated to be extremely cautious about
the drugs he prescribes for the patient, like a man who guards the apple of his
eye. If he errs, even in one detail, God considers the physician to be a
spiller a blood and deals with him accordingly.
“Like an eagle stirring up its nest... spreading its
wings... bearing them on its pinions.” Even if the physician finds no way of
curing the patient’s physical illness, he should at least encourage him and try
to offer some “medication” for his soul and spirit. God will bless a physician
who performs in this manner, both in this world and in the next.[5]
“Rabbi Acha stated: One who undergoes (therapeutic) blood-
letting says: ‘May it be your will, God, my God, that this procedure be
curative and that You will heal me; for You, God, are a faithful Healer and
Your cure is genuine.’ He says this prayer since it is not the way of men to
heal but they have adopted the practice.” This means that men should not
have become involved with medicine, but rather they should request mercy from
God. Thus, according to Rabbi Acha, medicine is not specifically sanctioned by
the Torah, but is rather a practice adopted by people and accepted only ex
post facto.
“Abbaya said: A person should not take this position in
light of Rabbi Yishmael’s interpretation of the verse, ‘and he shall cause him
to be thoroughly healed.’ According to Rabbi Yishmael this verse indicates that
the physician is authorized to heal.” In Abbaye’s own view, the Torah
granted a priori authorization to the physician to heal. It is not
necessary therefore to rely exclusively on pleas for God’s mercy.[6]
Rabbi Chanina states that everything happens at God’s
behest except for “cold draughts” or “thorns and snares.” The Hebrew tzinim
pachim is variously interpreted. Rabbi Chanina is referring to both the
cold and the heat. Exposure to these elements due to lack of caution can lead
to colds and fever, as it is written, “Cold draughts are in the way of the
crooked person; he who guards his soul shall be far from them.” (Prov. 22:5.)
Rabbi Acha interprets the verse homiletically: “And God
will remove every malady from you” (Deut. 7:15). “From you,”
it is, that no illnesses will come upon you, i.e. the matter is in your hands.
Rabbi Chanina and Rabbi Natan said: “Ninety-nine die of
the cold and one at God’s behest.” In other words, the cold is at the root of
up to ninety-nine percent of all illnesses. But the Sages say: “Ninety-nine
from neglect and one at God’s behest.” Even these Sages, who disagree with
Rabbi Chanina and his colleague and do not consider the cold to be at the root
of most illnesses, also agree that ninety-nine percent of all illnesses do not
come inexplicably at the hands of God. Rather, they come because the individual
does not protect his health and is neglectful of his body.[7]
“He is under a vow not to benefit from his fellow... his
fellow may heal him through a healing of beings.”[8]
Maimonides understands “healing of beings” to mean that he
should heal his body. This is not prohibited to the person under a vow not
to derive benefit from his fellow because the physician is both commanded
and obligated by the Torah to heal the sick. Consequently, the physician is
not considered to have “benefited” the sick person. Rather, he is fulfilling
his obligation vis-à-vis God.[9]
Once when Rabbi Yishmael and Rabbi Akiva were walking in
the outskirts of Jerusalem a sick man confronted them. He said, “My masters,
tell me how I can be cured.”
They said to him, “Take these medicines until you are cured.”
He said to them, “But who brought this disease upon me?”
They said to him, “The Holy One, Blessed be He.”
He said to them, “And you have stuck your head into a matter not your
own. He struck and you dare to heal? Are you not violating His will?”
They said to him, “What is your occupation?”
He said to them, “I till the soil, here is my sickle.”
They said to him, “And who created the field and the vineyard?”
He said to them, “The Holy One, Blessed be He!”
They said to him, “And you stick your head into something which does not concern
you? He has created the field and you pick its fruits?”
He said to them, “Don’t you see the sickle in my hand? If I would not
plow and clear and fertilize the field, it would not bring forth anything.”
They said to him, “Just as the tree will die if you don’t weed and
fertilize the field, so also the human body. Medicines can be compared to
weeding and fertilizing and the physician is like the farmer.”[10]
It was taught in the School of Elijah that domestic and
wild animals, loathsome animals and crawling creatures were all created only
as potential remedies for mankind.[11]
Ben-Sirra said, “My son, if you have become bedridden,
quickly beseech God so that he will heal you. And afterwards put yourself in
the physician’s care because he was created for this. And God allotted him
some of His wisdom. Don’t send him away until you are healed. Ben-Sirra said,
“God brought forth medicines from the earth and a discerning person will not
despise them. They aid the physicians to heal the malady and with the medicines
the pharmacist makes up the compound.”[12]
“...My son, do not become angry when you are ill. Pray to
God that he heal you.... And also allow some scope for the physician: he will
not be removed because there is a need for him. For he will sometimes succeed
because he too beseeches God that He will make his diagnosis and treatment
succeed in saving life. The one who sins before his Maker should put himself
into the physician’s hands.”[13]
“The pious fool, who despises the aid of the physician and
relies only on God’s help, is like the hungry person who despises bread and
hopes that God will guard him and heal him from this illness called hunger.”[16]
“The practice of medicine is an excellent way to develop
the intellect and the character, and acquire knowledge of God, blessed is He.
And when one becomes genuinely successful, his study and research are among the
greatest types of service of God.”[17]
“If Reuven is under a vow or an oath not to derive any
benefit from Shimon, Shimon may still heal him because it is a mitzvah.”[18]
The verses “for I am God your Healer” and “I will remove
illness from your midst” promise that the Jewish people will not require a
physician and that illness will not come upon them under ordinary
circumstances. Indeed, such was the situation for the righteous during the
age of prophecy, as is recorded about King Hezekiah and the Talmudic sages,
Rabba and Rabbi Yoseph. A physician never crossed the threshold of their
houses. Were it not that people are accustomed to practice medicine, an
individual would become ill as decreed in heaven of account on sins and would
be healed in accordance with God’s will and His decree. When God favors
a person’s ways, he has no call for remedies. Healing at God’s behest is
also thorough and complete, in contrast to the much more limited healing of the
physicians. (Exod. 15:26, 23:25.)
Since many do not rely on heavenly healing, and are
accustomed to turn to a physician for a medical cure, the Torah granted the
physician the right to heal. And God left the sick person to the workings
of nature so that natural i.e., medical remedies would be effective for him.
Thus, the physician should not refrain from healing the sick either because of
a fear lest they die at his hand or because he may say that God alone is the
Healer of all flesh. Rather, the physician should heal because the sick have
become accustomed to turning to physicians.[20]
In principle human beings should not have turned to
doctors or medical practice. Rather, when ill they should have requested that
God heal them in His mercy. But in practice, we did not merit this. Thus, the
physician should not worry that he is violating the king’s decree: God strikes,
so how can I heal? For God permitted natural beings to be healed by
physicians and they carry out his will, blessed be He.[22]
The sanction which the Torah granted physicians to heal is
limited to external blows and injuries caused by human agency. As the
Torah states “If a man strikes his fellow with a rock or with his fist...he
shall cause him to be thoroughly healed.” (Exod. ch.21) However, internal
maladies come upon a person at God’s behest. Therefore, the physician is
not permitted to heal these maladies. It is God’s exclusive prerogative to heal
them, as is written, “For He makes sore and He binds up.”[24]
Rabbenu Bachya holds the same view as Ibn Ezra, that a
mortal physician should not heal an internal illness. Its cure comes only at
the hand of God, the Healer of all flesh, and in whose hand lies the soul of
every living being.
He proceeds to distinguish between healing at the hand of
God and healing at the hand of man. In the Bible every instance of healing at
the hand of a mortal physician is described using the hard or accented (plosive
in this case) form of the letter “peh,” e.g. Exod. 21:19. In contrast,
every healing effected by God himself is written with a soft (unaccented)
“feh,” e.g. Exod. 15:26, Jer. 17:14, Ps. 147:3. The reason
for this is that the cure effected by a mortal physician is accompanied by trouble,
pain and bother. It may require the suffering involved in the taking of
bitter medicine, the cutting of the body (in an operation, for example) or some
other injury to the body. This is symbolized by the accent mark in the letter
“peh,” which gives the Hebrew word “healing” a certain heaviness and harshness
in Exodus 21:19 (a prime Biblical instance of healing by human agency).
In contrast, the healing effected by God Himself, is soft since it
involves no trouble, suffering, sadness or incidental injury.
In opposition to the position of Ibn Ezra and Rabbenu
Bachya, the Tosefists maintained that the Torah sanctioned healing of both
external injuries and internal diseases in stating “he shall cause him, the
guilty party’s own victim, to be thoroughly healed.” In Hebrew the root word
“heal” actually appears twice in this phrase. If the word “heal” had appeared
only once, one might have argued that sanction had only been given for healing
wounds inflicted by human beings and not for internal diseases. In the latter
case, the physician might have appeared to be violating God’s will. To preclude
this interpretation, the Torah repeats the word “heal.” This assures us that a
physician is also sanctioned to heal a blow inflicted by divine, rather than
human, agency and that God gives him the capacity to heal.[27]
The individual who is afraid to learn and engage in
medicine lest a patient die at his hand, is likened to one who kills the
patient. This is so because he could have learned to heal, but refrained.[29]
Even according to Nachmanides, who writes that the
righteous of earlier ages sought not physicians but prophets, and waited for
God’s direct healing, the physician is obligated to treat a patient who
approaches him. The physician should not consider whether the patient will
be cured by God in a miraculous way. This is so because the patient himself is
accustomed to rely on medical practice and not solely on God’s healing.
Rabbi Azulai adds that in our age one should not rely on miraculous cures. The sick person must conform to the universal practice of summoning a physician to heal him. He is not permitted to violate the universal practice, and should not consider himself greater than a number of pious people of different generations who were healed by physicians. But he must, at the same time, pray for and trust in God’s mercies.
Since there are now a great many physicians, not all of
them experts, “and they have felled many,” it is the sick person’s oblig- ation
to seek out the most expert physician. Otherwise, he risks causing himself
harm.[32]
He rules that not only the wholly righteous are permitted
to avoid consulting physicians. Indeed, anyone who so desires is permitted to
trust in God and not be dependent on physicians. Primarily since it is
observable that some physicians have a record of causing harm, a sick person may
trust in God and not follow the advice and instructions of physicians.
Certainly, one should not endanger oneself by following the physician’s
unproven conjectures regarding matters of internal medicine.[34]
X-rays and other specialized equipment are able to show
the internal organs clearly, treatments have been tested and since there is a
reasonable chance of success, a sick person should certainly do everything
possible which accepted medical practice dictates. But of course, while doing
so one may not take his mind off God, on Whom everything depends. He must
request of God in His mercy, that a cure be effected by means of the physician,
since everything is in the hands of the Creator. It may well be that
Nachmanides’ conviction that the wholly righteous person who trusts in God
should refrain from turning to a physician, only applies in the case of medical
hypotheses. But where the matter is clear from a medical
standpoint, it is as if God clearly wills to cure the disease through the
natural method which He has made available. God does not effect a miracle when
one can be helped in a natural way. Consequently, there is also an obligation
to heal.[36]
i. The approach of
Ibn Ezra and Rabbenu Bachya who limit the physician’s right to heal to external
injuries only is problematic. In a number of places, the Talmud records the
Sages’ instructions about how to heal different diseases, most of them
internal. Similarly, the Talmud[37]
tells of the Sage Samuel, the doctor of Rabbi Judah the Prince, who healed
Rabbi Judah’s ailing eyes. It cannot be that these sages ruled and acted
against Torah law.[38]
ii. A great sage
of our nation (Ibn Ezra) sought to distinguish between a blow delivered by man
and a blow delivered by God. He interpreted the phrase “he shall cause him to
be thoroughly healed” as sanctioning the healing only of the former. But the
nation has not followed him; it is unacceptable to leave man to the course of
nature. If the physician be expert, the patient should trust in God that he
will be helped through a diagnosis of his illness, and then through the
physician forbidding the intake of substances which aggravate it and
prescribing other substances which are beneficial – whether they be types of
food or medicines.[39]
He also follows Ibn Ezra in distinguishing between
external injuries and internal illnesses. But he does not completely reject the
physician’s sanction to heal internal illnesses. He claims that in the verse
“he shall cause him to be thoroughly healed,” the Torah referred to external
injuries such as a broken hand, a wound or a bruise, those which are easy for
the physician to diagnose. Healing them is an exact science, like engineering.
This is not the case with diseases of the internal organs to which the eye of
the physician does not have access. Thus, the physician is not able to make a
clear diagnosis, just a hypothesis. Indeed, there have been many physicians who
tried to cure various internal injuries and caused fatalities. In order to cure
these diseases, the physician requires great composure and deliberation, and a
great deal of caution, so as not to make a mistake and injure the patient.[41]
A person must protect himself from the cold and the heat,
and from other potentially harmful conditions. He who does not and takes the
position that if God does not decree evil for an individual, no mishap will befall
him, is a pious fool. Similarly, with regard to healing: God runs the world
according to nature. A specific drug will cure a certain illness.
Similarly, some kinds of vegetation, roots, resins and special leaves are
effective in a natural way; others in a supernatural way. Some are effective
only in combination with others. Indeed, a number of remedies are recorded in
the Talmud. Furthermore the Sages said in Sanhedrin, “A Torah scholar may not
live in a city which has no physician.” In addition, we know that it is
permissible to set aside the laws of Shabbat in order to heal a person who is
dangerously ill.
One is not to follow the example of righteous individuals
who were cured by means of prayer or petitions of mercy. Those who put
themselves outside the rule of nature are people of great power and merit. I
have seen that such people are few in number. And even they would not have
waited for a miracle had a miracle not spontaneously occurred to them. They too
would have sought help within the framework of nature.
The physician has the right to heal even an illness which
comes at the hand of God. That is, if he is an expert and a specialist. But if
he is not well-qualified, he is forbidden to engage in healing because he may
very likely harm the patient.
In serious cases, where the body’s own defenses cannot
successfully fight off the cause of the illness, the patient requires external
aid. The Creator has provided an abundance of vegetation with a variety of
curative powers. And He has given the wise person the wisdom to examine their
various capabilities and to know the science of healing and the use of
curative vegetation and other substances, each type for its own particular
purpose. We have become accustomed to these usages of medicine for treating all
bodily illnesses.[43]
In different generations and locations, our Sages have
raised this problem and have offered a variety of different solutions.
a. Lest the physician ask himself: “Why should I take on
all the trouble of getting involved in healing the patient. Perhaps I will make
a mistake and the patient will die accidentally at my hand.” Therefore, the
Torah had to grant permission to the physician to heal. If he is
sufficiently careful and a “skilled physician” (qualified), he is not culpable
in the event of injury.
b. Lest the physician say to himself: “Since God has
brought this illness to the person, how can I heal him?” Therefore, the Torah
granted permission to the physician who understands medicine and its practice
to use these natural methods and drugs to heal disease. Since people have
become accustomed to using medicines, and since the Torah has sanctioned their
use, the physician has not only the license but also the great mitzvah
of saving life. The physician is not merely permitted to heal an illness,
he is obligated to do so.[44]
2. Rabbi Nissim Ashkenazi
With regard to a medical procedure in which the patient
does not endure any pain or trouble, unlike intake of bitter medicines,
bloodletting, or cutting or severing a part of the body, no special Biblical
license is required. This is so because it is similar to God’s way of healing,
which is not accompanied by pain and does not bring additional suffering. But,
without Biblical license, we would have thought that it is forbidden for a
mortal physician to ad- minister a cure which is accompanied by great pain. [45]
3. Rabbi M. A. Danateh[46]
a. If the patient
refuses treatment because he has lost his mental balance, or is very
frightened, or suffering, the physician is still obliged to heal him. This case
is applicable when the physician knows that this treatment will be good for the
patient. The physician should not heed the patient’s refusal (even, for
example, in the case of an operation). In the end, the patient will recognize
that this is for his own good.
b. The Torah has
only sanctioned healing but it is forbidden for a physician to administer a
lethal drug to a patient who is suffering and has come to loathe life. In this
case, the physician must trust that God will deal with the patient in
accordance with His will.
c. The physician
fulfills the mitzvah to heal only if he does so without charge. But if he charges
a fee, especially if the fee is higher than the amount he would be earning for
the same expenditure of time in another field, then the physician is not
fulfilling a mitzvah. He is only exercising the license granted him by the
Torah.[47]
4. Rabbi Abraham Yitzchak Kook[48]
If medical treatment were certain to be effective, it
would be inconceivable that the physician is not sanctioned to heal, even where
the malady came at God’s hand. This is clear from the verse, “Do not stand idly
by the blood of your brother.” Since one is obligated to heal in every case,
there would be no room to argue that since God struck the person, no one is
sanctioned to save him.
Rather, the necessity of a special verse to permit the
physician to heal is derived from the fact that the fundamentals of medicine
are not entirely clear, and all medical wisdom is based on uncertain
assumptions. Thus, there is some doubt surrounding every medical treatment as
to whether it will be salutary or harmful. For this reason, the Torah had to
grant special permission to the physician to practice medicine, the only
methods of healing at man’s own disposal.[49]
5. Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda Waldenberg[50]
a. The verse “he
shall cause him to be thoroughly healed,” which permits the physician to heal,
teaches us that the physician may also administer drugs for easing the
patient’s severe pains. He may do so even if the drugs might harm the patient
and even if they entail a risk of hastening his death, because nothing is more
arduous for a person to endure than suffering. Thus, the giving of drugs to
ease pain is itself considered healing. Again, it is permissible to give these
even at the risk of hastening the patient’s death.[51]
b. The duplication
of the verb “to heal” in the verse which sanctions healing (Exod.21:19)
teaches us that the physician is obligated to heal both an infectious and
non-infectious disease. Even though a physician may possibly put himself in
danger by exposing himself to an infectious disease, he is still obligated to
treat it after taking all possible precautions. He is not permitted to refrain
from treatment for fear that he will get infected. The Sages promise the
physician that if he will act with Godly motivation, nothing evil will befall
him.[52]
c. When the
patient’s life is in danger, the physician must, of course, treat him in order
to save him. But the duplication of the verb “to heal” in Exodus 21:19
teaches us that a physician fulfills a mitzvah and an obligation, even in
healing a patient who is suffering or injured in one part of his body and not
in mortal danger.[53]
G. The Mitzvah to Heal
The Torah granted the physician permission to heal,
and this is a mitzvah.[54]
Rabbi David Samuel Halevi,[55]
in his commentary on the Shulchan Aruch asks, if healing is a mitzvah
why is the term permission invoked first?
Rabbi Halevi explains that true healing comes at the hand
of God in response to a plea for mercy in prayer. This is the meaning of the
verse cited at the beginning of this essay, “I have smitten and I will heal” (Deut.
32:29). But because most people do not merit this, they need to be healed in a
natural way. God Himself assented to this method and implanted in nature the
capacity to heal. This is the meaning of granting permission to the
physician to heal. And since the sick person has reached the point where he
needs a physician, the latter has an obligation to heal him. This
obligation is the mitzvah to heal mentioned in the Shulchan Aruch.
Rabbi Joseph Shaul Nathanson[56]
clarifies further. Had the Torah not granted permission to the physician to
heal, it would have seemed that the physician wanted to change the Creator’s
creation. But since the Torah did sanction healing, it is, at root, a
fulfillment of the mitzvah of saving human life.[57]
H. Why Doesn’t the Physician Utter a Blessing Upon Fulfilling the Commandment to Heal?
If healing is a mitzvah, as Maimonides rules, why does one
not utter a blessing as one does on other mitzvot?
Since this mitzvah of “returning lost bodily capacity,”
i.e. healing, is done to prevent and remove danger, it is classed with mitzvot
directed against danger, all of which require no blessing.[58]
It is wrong to prolong prayer in the face of danger to life. Rather, one should
hasten to save life. This is the intention of the Talmud[59]
“Is it possible that Israel is singing while the King is sitting on His throne
with the Books of Life and Death open before Him?” Similarly, the Midrash[60]
asks: “Why did Moses not prolong his prayer for the welfare of his sister
Miriam stricken with leprosy? He did not do so in order that the Jewish people
would not wonder why Moses was praying at length while his sister was in
travail.”[61]
I. Is the Physician who Earns a Living From Treating the Sick Considered to be Fulfilling the Mitzvah?
With regard to a physician who earns a living from
treating patients in accordance with accepted medical practice: Is he
considered to be fulfilling a mitzvah even though he is motivated by the
anticipated profit and not by the desire to perform mitzvot?
The Shulchan Aruch[62]
rules that persons on their way to redeem captives and persons on similar
missions, are considered to be involved in the performance of a mitzvah. The
commentary Biur Halacha limits this to the case where those on the
mission are deriving no personal benefit. But if they are being remunerated and
their primary motivation is to profit and support themselves, then they are not
considered to be engaged in a mitzvah.
However, one ought to distinguish between this type of
case and that of a physician. Even though the physician works for a fee,
without which he would not treat the sick person, his activity is
essentially the performance of a mitzvah. For this reason, and because he
wants to heal while practicing medicine, and not just earn money, he is
considered to be actively engaged in fulfilling a mitzvah. This is not true of
one who is not directly involved in a mitzvah actively, but aids and prepares
the way for the fulfillment of the mitzvah. If such a person’s primary
motivation is to earn money, then he is not considered to be engaged in a
mitzvah. However, if his motivation is based equally on profit and on mitzvah
observance, he is still considered to be engaged in a mitzvah. This distinction
is evident from the commentary Mishna Brurah.[63]
A story is told about the Chafetz Chaim (Rabbi Israel
Meir HaCohen) who entered a pharmacy to purchase a medication. He said to the
pharmacist, “I envy you for the many mitzvot which you merit daily.” The
pharmacist answered, “But my intention is simply to earn a living.” The Rabbi
responded, “If so, listen to my advice and you will merit a great blessing.
Combine this intention of earning a living with the intention that the sick
people will be fully cured through the medicines you sell. If when selling you
think both of earning a living and the mitzvah of healing the sick,
every act you do during the day will be considered a mitzvah and you will be
blessed.”
In the Tosephta we see that even when a person has
not performed a mitzvah in its entirety, he still earns a partial reward for
his incomplete act. If a person loses a coin which is found and used by a poor
person, the loser gains a small reward in Heaven since the poor ultimately
benefited from his money. We see that the mitzvah of giving charity is
fulfilled, albeit in a partial manner, even without intention to perform a
mitzvah. Similarly, the phy- sician who heals a sick person, even without
intending to perform a mitzvah, is automatically performing the mitzvah of
charity and lovingkindness. For this mitzvah, he receives some reward.[64]
A. Prohibition to Withhold Medical Treatment
The Shulchan Aruch rules that a physician who
refrains from treating a sick person who turns to him is a spiller of blood.[65]
Maimonides writes that the Torah warns us against being
negligent in saving life when we see someone in danger and have the capacity to
save him. This warning is contained in the verse, “Do not stand idly by the
blood of your neighbor.” (Lev. 19:16) Because this prohibition involves
no sin of commission, only omission, the punishment for transgressing is
limited. But this does not lessen the severity of the prohibition, as
Maimonides writes, “Although the punishment of lashes is not meted out for
passively violating a prohibition, such a violation is still serious: ‘One who
destroys a single human life is considered as if he has destroyed the entire
world.’”[66]
The analogy between a physician who declines to exercise
his ability to save a sick person and a killer is derived from the verse, “On
the day that you stood aloof, on the day that strangers took captive his
substance, and foreigners entered into his gates, and cast lots on Jerusalem,
then you too were one of them.” (Obadiah 1:11) This refers
to Edom who was standing aloof, without offering assistance when the Jewish
people were in trouble, facing the enemy at its gates. In the words of the
prophet, this position renders Edom a participant in the assault on the Jewish
people and the razing of Jerusalem.[67]
Rabbi Judah Ayash[68]
holds that a physician who is not an expert in the field should not practice
medicine. If he does so regardless and causes harm, he is liable to the full
extent of the law. Similarly, an expert physician who withholds medical treat-
ment is liable for any harm, even death, which comes to the patient.[69]
But Rabbi Isaac ben Sheshet[70]
writes that the Sages made use of hyperbole, magnifying the seriousness of sin
in their character- izations. In this case, they did not literally mean that a
physician who withholds medical treatment is like a killer. They used this
expression to emphasize the seriousness of the matter.[71]
A patient has special confidence in his own physician.
Thus, if he turns to his regular physician despite the fact that there are
others available to treat him, he should not be refused. Not every physician
may succeed in curing him: a personal connection and faith in the physician are
important factors in the healing process. Thus, the obligation falls
specifically on the physician to whom the patient turns.[72]
B. Withholding Medical Treatment because of the Patient’s Failure to Pay
The medical oath of the sixth-century physician Asaph con-
tains the following warning: “Do not harden your heart against showing
compassion for and healing the wretched and the poor.”[73]
Rabbi Chaim Joseph David Azulai[74]
believes that the Talmudic statement “the best of the physicians are destined
for hell” refers to physicians who withhold treatment from patients unable to
pay in full. By so doing, they may sometimes cause the death of a sick and
indigent person.[75]
C. Withholding Medical Treatment Due to the Physician’s Fear that He May Err and Do Harm
Rabbi Azulai writes that, in principle, a physician should
not fear lest he err and cause injury. On the contrary, he should try to heal
to the best of his ability. The Torah emphatically permits the physician to
heal for this very reason. However, the law may possibly permit a physician to
refrain from healing because of these fears. Rabbi Azulai has difficulty in
deciding this point and therefore does not issue a ruling. He writes that each
case will depend both on the particular circumstances and on the patient
himself. In some cases the physician is absolutely barred from withholding
treatment, while in others, he may. But the author does not delineate with the
cases or the conditions.[76]
D. Delay in Providing Medical Treatment
When a patient comes to a physician, the latter should not
cause him unnecessary delay by forcing him to wait until he leisurely finishes
his drink or ties his shoe or puts on his coat etc. He should treat him
promptly. Certainly in urgent cases, the physician should not delay at all.
We understand this imperative from the warning addressed
to a judge, he is forbidden, “to delay the judgment,” i.e. to force the
litigants to wait. The midrash[77]
tells of Rabbi Shimon’s query to his teacher as he was being taken out to be
hanged during one of the Roman persecutions, “My heart is sinking because I
don’t know why I am being executed as a punishment from God.” His teacher
replied, “Has a person ever come to you for a judgment whom you have put off
until you finished your drink or laced up your sandals or put on your outer
garment?” The Torah says, “if you afflict...” there is no difference between a
large or a small affliction (i.e., in using a doubled form of the Hebrew verb
“to afflict,” the Torah prohibits causing even a minute affliction.) Rabbi
Shimon responded, “You have comforted me, my teacher.”
The Mishna[78]
contains the same idea, “The sword comes to the world because of delaying
judgment.” If such a statement is made with regard to judges, it applies all
the more so with regard to physicians who are engaged in saving lives. If a
physician “delays the judgment,” i.e. delays medical treatment, he may miss the
opportunity to save the patient’s life.[79]
E. A Physician who Withholds Treatment from a Sick Person because it is Beneath His Dignity to Treat Him
Rabbi Moses Dov Vilner[80]
notes that the mitzvah of returning a lost article allows an exemption for an
elderly person whose dignity would be compromised by returning the article.
Such a person does not violate the Biblical prohibition, “You may not ignore.”
According to Maimonides, the mitzvah of healing is learned from the
(contiguous) verse “and you shall return it to him” which includes the return
of his body (i.e. the body’s functioning). If so, it might seem that the
physician should have the same prerogative: if treating a certain patient is
beneath the dignity of a prominent physician, perhaps he should be exempt from
treating him.
This reasoning is untenable for two reasons:
a) Besides the physician’s obligation to heal, there is
also an obligation which is derived from the mitzvah “Do not stand idly by the
blood of your neighbor.” An elderly person is not exempt from this mitzvah even
if it is not in keeping with his dignity.
b) Logic dictates that the elderly person is exempt from
fulfilling the mitzvah when not in keeping with his dignity only in the
following circumstances: when the lost article is such that had it been his
own, the old person would not have troubled himself to retrieve it on account
of his dignity. But if he would have taken the trouble for himself, he must
also do so for his neighbor. In the case of illness, a person would give
everything he owns to save himself. Therefore, he must also be involved in
saving his neighbor even if this is not in keeping with his dignity.[81]
F. A Physician who is Called on by Patients During his Rest Hours
Rabbi Obadia Hadaya[82]
was asked by a physician how he should respond to patients who called on him at
all hours of the day and night. Should he interrupt his rest in order to
receive them lest he be considered a killer by the standard of the Shulchan
Aruch which likens one who refrains from healing to a spiller of blood?
The author cites another rabbi who bases his argument on
the principle that one must give all he has to avoid transgressing a Biblical
prohibition. Accordingly, the physician would be obligated to interrupt his
meal or his rest in order to treat the patients who call on him. Even if by so
doing he will later become weak and unable to continue treating patients, he
must still do everything incumbent upon him as long as he can, regardless of
the price. If, later, he grows too weak or tired to carry on, he is then
considered a victim of circumstances and is exempted by the Torah.
But Rabbi Hadaya rejects this argument by claiming that a
Jew has to give everything he has to avoid transgressing a Biblical prohibition
only when people are actively trying to force him to transgress the
prohibition. But here, there is neither an issue of religious persecution nor
an active transgression of withholding assistance to the sick. Furthermore,
there is no certainty regarding the spilling of blood here, just a (remote)
possibility that a patient would become dangerously ill and die. Under these
circumstances, where the patient is not known to be dangerously ill, one is not
obligated to exhaust all his resources to avoid a transgression. And one is
certainly not obligated to injure oneself in order to treat a sick person. In
our case, if the physician were to be forced to receive every patient who calls
on him at all hours of the day and night, he himself would grow weak and
endanger his own life. On this point the Sages have declared, “Your life takes
precedence!” Because the Torah’s “ways are ways of pleasantness and all its
paths are peaceful,” we do not find the Torah obligating a person to sacrifice
himself to this extent in order to save his fellow. The statement in the Shulchan
Aruch which likens one who withholds medical treatment to a spiller of
blood refers specifically to one who does so out of contempt, without any
reason.[83]
G. Is a Physician Permitted to Abandon his Post During a Strike Called to Protest Unfair Salaries?
Rabbi Shlomo Goren (former Chief Rabbi of Israel)
addressed this problem in the context of the doctors’ strike in Israel. First,
he observed that the Jewish physician faces difficult moral dilemmas heightened
by the general moral responsibility incumbent upon physicians as those
responsible for the publics’ health and loyal to the code of medical ethics and
the Hippocratic oath. Is he per- mitted to abandon the hospitals and clinics
where he works and thereby forsake the patients who have nowhere else to turn?
Clearly, the limited staff remaining on duty in the hospitals is unable to
provide most of the medical services needed by patients.
It may be possible to argue that since suitable medical
care is available for a special fee, the physicians are not personally
obligated to carry out the mitzvah “Do not stand idly by the blood of your
neighbor.” Rather, responsibility for the physical welfare of the public falls
on the government, its ministers, and those who oversee public health. If we
assume that the physicians’ claims against unfair salaries are justified, then
they may well argue that they bear no obligation to the sick, either
contractual or moral. The obligation rests on the Health Department or the
various Health Insurance Funds to which members pay a fee in exchange for the
Funds’ obligation to provide medical care. But the physicians themselves may be
exempt from any obligation as long as their employers are not fulfilling their
obligations to them.
But even this argument is tenable only where it is
possible to obtain (alternative) medical care for a fee. If, however,
physicians also shut down the clinics for pay-as-you-go medical services, and
retreat to unknown locations, the situation is more serious. Indeed, this
happened during the last large doctors’ strike in Israel. By using such a
tactic, physicians neglect both of the mitzvot incum- bent upon anyone capable
of offering assistance to save his fellow man: “And you shall return it to
him,” i.e. returning the full use of his body, and “Do not stand idly by the
blood of your neighbor.” But in spite of all, perhaps it is still possible for
the physicians to make a tenable argument for their lack of personal
responsibility. As long as the authorities charged directly with the
responsibility for public health can rectify the situation by paying suitable
wages, they cannot place the responsibility on the physicians.[84]
Rabbi Goren considers the issue at length and in detail,
including direct and indirect implications. Among other points, he takes up the
nature of the obligation to heal and the problem of the physician’s salary.
Regarding the recent doctors’ strike he distinguished between the first and
second phases. In the first phase, physicians did not abandon their posts
altogether, but provided medical assistance at special pay-as-you-go clinics
instead of the regular framework of hospitals and Health Fund clinics. Their
action coincided with the ruling of halachic authorities that a physician is
permitted to collect a fee from every patient able to pay, and to make the
treatment conditional on payment. It stands to reason that most of those
hospitalized and insured by the Health Funds would be considered able to pay,
because the Health Funds were obligated to reimburse them for the fees.
Regarding the second phase of the strike, however,
physicians failed to fulfill their personal responsibility when they left their
posts entirely. Because of the mitzvah of saving life, this respon- sibility
cannot be waved off by reference to the direct responsibility of the public
authorities. There is no way to ignore this sacred responsibility, which is
based on the verse “Do not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor,” and
obligates the physician to come to the aid of the sick in need of his care.
Indeed, the verse obligates every individual, regardless of whether he bears
formal responsibility, to come to the aid of someone in trouble. Where there is
danger to life, or even the possibility of a person’s health being impaired,
every individual able to render assistance should do so, even if the
responsibility for the sick person’s health falls on another party. Physicians
are, however, permitted to make their return to full regular work conditional
on their employers meeting their justified monetary claims. And the courts
should help them obtain proper working conditions.[85]
Source: ASSIA
– Jewish Medical Ethics,
Vol. III, No. 1, January 1997, pp. 18-29
[1].
Rabbi Joel Sirkis, “Bayit Chadash,” commentary of Tur, Yoreh
De’ah,
section 336.
[2].
Mishna Pesachim, 4:9.
[3].
Maimonides, Commentary to the Mishna, Pesachim 4:9.
[4].
Zohar, pt. 3, sec. 299.
[5].
Zohar, pt. 3, sec. 306.
[6].
Brachot 60a.
[7].
Bava Metziah 107b, Vayikra Rabba 16:8.
[8].
Mishna Nedarim, 4:4.
[9].
Maimonides, Commentary to the Mishna, Nedarim, ch.4.
[13].
The Book of Ben-Sirra 38:12-14.
[14]. The term “Earlier Authorities” refers to the
sages who lived in Europe during the Middle Ages and bequeathed a rich
literature of Biblical and Talmudic commen- tary, Jewish thought and law.
[15]. Rabbi Moses ben Maimon, 1135-1205, Spain-Egypt.
[16]. Introduction to Sefer Hakatzeret, p. 47.
[17].
Shemonah Perakim, ch. 5.
[18]. Mishneh Torah, Laws of Vows, ch.6, law
8. See also Section B.3. above where his commentary on the Mishna is cited
concerning the source of the commandment to heal.
[19]. Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman, thirteenth century,
Spain.
[20]. Nachmanides, Commentary to the Torah,
Leviticus 26:11.
[21]. Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki, 1040-1105, France.
[22]. Commentary of the Talmud, Bava Kama, 85.
[23]. Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra, twelfth century, Spain
[24]. Commentary on the Torah, Exod.
21:19.
[25].
Rabbi Bachya Ben-Asher, fourteenth century, Spain.
[26]. Thirteenth century, France
[27]. Commentary on Bava Kama, 85a, entry
beginning, “it was given.”
[28]. Twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Germany.
[29]. Sefer Chassidim, sec.1069.
[30]. The term “later authorities” refers to Jewish
scholars working after the sixteenth century, who based themselves on the work
of the “early authorities” and also examined their work.
[31]. Rabbi Chayyim Joseph David Azulai, eighteenth
century, Eretz Israel-Italy.
[32].
Birkei Yosef, Commentary on Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh De’ah, sec.
336, para. 2-3.
[33]. Nineteenth century, Poland.
[34]. Responsa Avney Nezer, Choshen Mishpat,
sec.193.
[35]. Tel Aviv, 1982.
[36].
Shana Beshana, (1982), p. 204.
[37]. Bava Metziah, 85b.
[38].
Sefer Mateh Moshe, cited in Sefer Assia, Vol. 2, p. 64.
[39].
Rabbi Menachem ben Aharon, Tseidah Laderech, article 5, topic 2, ch. 2.
[40].
Eighteenth century, Prague-Hamburg.
[41]. Sefer Kreiti U’Pleiti,
sec. 188, para. 5.
[42].
Eighteenth century, Turkey, Sefer Ma’a’se Avraham, pt. Yoreh De’ah,
sec. 55.
[43].
Emunah U’Bitachon, ch.1, sec. 6.
[44].
Nachmanides, Torat HaAdam, part entitled “Danger.”
[45].
Ma’a’se Avraham, vol. II. Pt. Yoreh De’ah, sec. 55.
[46]. Nineteenth century, Czechoslovakia.
[47].
Dibburei Emet, Part “Yoreh De’ah”, sec. 336.
[48].
Chief Rabbi of Palestine, 1865-1935.
[49].
Responsa Da’at Cohen, sec. 140.
[50]. Judge in the Rabbinical High Court, Jerusalem.
[51]. Responsa Tzitz Eliezer, pt. 13, sec. 87.
[52].
Responsa Tzitz Eliezer, pt. 9, “Medicine” ch. 5.
[53].
Responsa Tzitz Eliezer, “Ramat Rachel,” ch. 21, sec.2.
[54]. Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh De’ah, sec.
336, para. 2.
[55]. Seventeenth century, Poland.
[56]. Nineteenth century, Galicia, author of Shoele
U’Meishiv.
[57]. Sefer Divrei Shaul Yosef Da’at on the
Code of Jewish Law, part, “Yoreh De’ah” sec. 336.
[58].
Mishneh Torah, Laws of Blessing, ch. 11, para. 4.
[59]. Rosh Hashanah, 32b.
[60].
Tanchuma, “Tzav.”
[61]. Rabbi Solomon Hilperin, Sefer HaRofim,
sec. 1, Bialistock, 1923, rpt. Sefer Assia, vol. 2, pp. 58-79.
[62].
Orach Chaim, sec. 640, para. 7.
[63]. Sec. 38, comment #24, citing the commentary “Magen
Avraham.”
[64].
Rabbi Yitzchak Zilberstein, contemporary oral ruling.
[65].
Shulchan Arch, Yoreh De’ah, sec. 336, para. 1.
[66]. Mishneh Torah, “Laws Pertaining to a
Killer,” ch.1, sec. 16; Sefer HaMitzvot, Negative Commandment #297; also
in Tosephot HaRosh of Rabenu Asher, Brachot 60a in the
name of Rabbi Jacob of Orleans.
[67].
Rabbi Meshulam Roth, early nineteenth century, Israel, Responsa Kol Mevasser,
pt. 1, sec. 47.
[68].
Eighteenth century, Algeria.
[71].
Responsa HaRibash, sec. 171.
72. Professor Shimon Glick, “The Jewish Physician,” Assia,
no. 35 1983, p.7. The presentation is based on the Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh
De’ah, sec. 336, para. 1.
[75]. Cited by Prof. Steinberg in “The Doctors’ Strike,”
Assia 21, 1978, p. 17.
[76]. Birkei Yosef, Yoreh De’ah,
sec. 336, para. 5.
[77]. Mechilta, Mishpatim.
[78]. Avot, 5:11.
[79]. Assia, vol. 2, p. 69.
[80]. Ashkelon, Israel.
[81]. Responsa Chemdat Tzvi, vol.
2, Yoreh De’ah, sec. 19.
[82]. First half of twentieth century, Jerusalem.
[83]. Responsa Yaskil Avdi, Vol. 6, Yoreh
De’ah, sec. 18.
[84].
On the subject of ministerial responsibility for the field covered by each
government minister’s office, see Sefer Prisha, Yoreh De’ah, sec.
336; Shabbat 54b.
[85].
“The Doctor’s Strike,” Assia, no. 39, 1984, pp. 32-45.