Page 32 - 20818_park-B_efi
P. 32

20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Cyan
 20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Black
 #20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Yellow
 20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Magenta
                                                                                     1
               no wrong. But if he would have paid more heed and made greater
               efforts were it his own son, then he is guilty.”
                  Practicing  medicine  is  holy work.  Chazal  describe  a physician
               called Abba Umna, who merited being greeted from Heaven every                          Medical-Halachic
               day (Taanit 21b), for several reasons:
                  1.  He had separate waiting rooms for men and women, and when                                   Responsa
 #
                    he let blood from a woman he would cover the site of the
                    blood-letting in order to maintain her modesty.                                           Shiurei Torah L’rofim
                  2.  He had a box in an inconspicuous place where rich patients                                             Of
                    would pay, so that the poor would not be ashamed if they left
                    without paying for their treatment.                                                     Rav Yitzchak
                  3.  When a Torah scholar or a poor person would come to him for                             Zilberstein
                    treatment, he would treat them for free.
               Abba Umna recognized that treating a human being created in                                Rabbi of Ramat Elchanan
               Tzelem Elokim requires extreme responsibility. He conducted himself                                Bnei Brak, Israel
               with modesty and respect for the patient. This type of treatment is
               described by the Shulachan Aruch as “meod meod”- extremely good.
                                          

                                                                                                                        Volume Two
                         A licensed physician who unintentionally
                         caused damage in a foreign country

                   1     Question
                                                                                                                       Translated by
               A patient suffering from kidney problems sought help from a phy-
               sician in Israel who used unconventional treatments. The physician                       Fred Rosner, M.D., F.A.C.P., M.A.C.P.
               suggested a specific diet that he believed would help the kidney re-
               cover. The diet included a lot of salts, which accumulated in the body
               due to the patient’s decreased kidney function. As a result of the diet,
               the patient became acutely ill.
                  The physician was licensed in England and France to engage in this
               practice, but he was not licensed by the authorities in Israel.
                  What is the halachic view of this case?
                                                                                                             M a i m o n i d es R es e a r c h I n s t i t u t e



        26               1  Medical-HalacHic Responsa of Rav ZilbeRstein





 #20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Yellow 20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Magenta 20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Cyan 20818_efi-ab - 20818_efi-ab | 1 - A | 18-08-20 | 13:29:01 | SR:-- | Black   #
   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37