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                                                                                               In Tractate Yoma (83a) it states: If the patient claims that he needs
                                                                                               to eat on Yom Kippur but the physician says he does not need to eat,
                                                                                               we listen to the patient because “the heart knows the bitterness of the
               98             A NON-DANGEROUS                                                  soul” (Mishlei 14:10). The Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim #618:1) rules
                              DISEASE THAT MAY
                                                                                               likewise. The Shiltei Gibborim asks in Tractate Shabbos (Ch. 18, p. 144b
 #
                              DEVELOP INTO A
                                                                                               in the pages of the Rif :2): Does this apply only in reference to eating
                              DANGEROUS DISEASE
                                                                                               on Yom Kippur?  What about if the patient complains of pain in a
                                                                                               specific organ and claims he is in danger and one should desecrate
                                                                                               Shabbos for him? If the physician feels there is no danger, do we also                                                                                              9
                                                                                               say that “the heart knows the bitterness of the soul,” and pay heed to
                                                                                               the patient’s words?
                   1    Question                                                                  The Bi’ur Halacha (#328:10, s.v. verofe) states three general princi-

                                                                                               pals about the matter:
               A patient is not currently in danger, but his disease is liable to develop
               into something that can endanger his life. Is he allowed to eat on Yom             1.  If the patient claims to feel weakness in a specific organ or limb,
               Kippur and to desecrate Shabbos in order to be healed and prevent                    and requests a certain medication that is beneficial for that
               the danger from occurring, or, since at the moment there is no actual                illness, we certainly pay heed to his request. The dictum that
               danger, is he prohibited to do these transgressions?                                 “the heart knows the bitterness of the soul” applies in this case.
                                                                                                    Therefore, even if the physician says there is no need for the
                   1    AnsweR                                                                      medication, we still administer it.
                                                                                                  2.  If the disease is well-known and there is no dispute about how
               The Iggros Moshe writes (Orach Chaim, Vol. 3 #91): A patient who                     to treat it, then if the physician says that a certain medication
               is not in danger, but is liable to become endangered, is permitted to                will not help, we abide by his opinion even if the patient feels
               swallow pills with water on Yom Kippur in order to be healed, if he                  otherwise. It is most probable that the physician is a greater
               cannot swallow the pills without water. Since if he is not healed, he                expert on the topic.
               will be in danger, his present disease is already viewed as dangerous.
                  Proof for the above is in Tractate Avodah Zarah (28a) where the                 3.  If the patient knows the nature of his body to be healed by a
               Gemara wants to prove that diseased gums and teeth are viewed as                     specific medication, while the physician disagrees, perhaps one
               an internal wound, for which one desecrates Shabbos, based on the                    should heed the words of the patient. This is because it is prob-
               disease called tsafdina. The Gemara rejects this proof, since tsafdina               able that a person is more of an expert on his own body than
               is a disease which begins in the mouth but ends up in the intestines.                one-hundred physicians.
               This seems to indicate that although the disease at present is only in             My father-in-law, Rav Y. S. Elyashiv zt”l, believed that the words of
               the gums and teeth, it is considered a dangerous illness because it will        the Bi’ur Halacha were only referring to a situation where the patient
               end up affecting the intestines.                                                complains of pain in a specific organ and the physician does not find




        250              1  Medical-HalacHic Responsa of Rav ZilbeRstein                       Physician discounts possible danger of back-pain  2             267
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