{"id":7956,"date":"2016-01-27T10:00:20","date_gmt":"2016-01-27T08:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=7956"},"modified":"2016-08-10T17:32:08","modified_gmt":"2016-08-10T14:32:08","slug":"01-27-10","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/01-27-10\/","title":{"rendered":"10. Doctors and Nurses Driving to Work and Back Home on Shabbat"},"content":{"rendered":"
If a doctor has a shift on Shabbat morning and lives too far away from the hospital to reach it on foot, he must drive to the hospital before Shabbat so he will not have to desecrate Shabbat. Be-di\u2019avad<\/em>, if he did not drive to the hospital beforehand, he may drive there on Shabbat, since saving a life overrides Shabbat. Nevertheless, if he knows before Shabbat that he will have a shift on Shabbat, he must arrange to spend Shabbat in the hospital or nearby (Igrot Moshe<\/em>, O\u0124 1:131).<\/p>\n The best solution for doctors and nurses in such a situation is to hire a non-Jewish driver to drive them from their homes to the hospital. This way, these doctors and nurses can enjoy Shabbat in their homes, and then when they need to go to the hospital, they can get there with the help of a non-Jew. Even though the Sages prohibited benefiting from melakha<\/em> performed by a non-Jew on Shabbat (above, 25:1), they permitted this for the sake of a sick person.[11]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n Doctors and nurses who finish their shifts on Shabbat morning may return home with the help of a non-Jewish driver. The Sages ruled that those involved with saving lives on Shabbat may transgress rabbinic prohibitions in order to return home, so that they will not be tempted in the future to refuse to go in the first place. If they are forced to stay in the hospital until after Shabbat, it will be very upsetting for them and their families, and we are concerned that as a result they will quit their jobs or avoid working shifts on Shabbat.[12]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n