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October 14, 2024
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Linking Northern and Central NJ, Bronx, Manhattan, Westchester and CT

Zeidy Is in the Hospital: A 14-Point Checklist Explaining What to Do

One of the leading causes of death in this country is medical error. And, this author has been told, we—the religious Jewish family members—are the leading “pain in the neck” ethnicity at hospitals, because many a frum patient has relatives that stay at the hospital round-the-clock. But this latter point is a good thing. It involves the preservation of life—one of the highest priorities in halacha. What follows is a checklist of what the family members should watch out for.

Knaf

One thing first, however. Always watch out for: K.N.A.F. It stands for kiddush Hashem, nice and firm. It is Zeidy’s health at stake, so you must be firm. Don’t be intimidated, but always be nice.

There are three categories in this checklist. Go over it each time you begin and for every time you transfer to another family member: Things to make sure they do, things to make sure they don’t do and things you should do.

Things to Make Sure They Do

1. Always double check that when they take the patient for imaging, or anything else that they strap the patient in the wheelchair. This is for back and forth. Also, there is a gurney that they use to transfer the patient onto—the wheels need to be in a locked position. When this author was in the hospital with COVID, I got dropped. It hurt badly. Also, staff changes all the time and most hospitals do not have effective systems in place to make sure that everyone does this kind of thing.

2. Make sure that the staff washes their hands and also uses fresh gloves. This helps prevent infections. When I was watching my father, alav hashalom (of blessed memory), the nurse didn’t clean her hands when doing all of the kidney dialysis stuff. This should be for the post-op infection antibiotics, any catheter changes, any central line precautions and all the kidney dialysis stuff.

3. Make sure that the alarms on medical equipment are checked out quickly.

4. They will think that you are a pain for this one, but try to make sure that they get the test results to the correct person right away. Doctors have confided in me that this is one of the main reasons that people die in the hospital.

5. Nowadays, most hospitals label the body part upon which the surgery is done, but make sure that it is correct. Don’t use the terms, “Make sure it is the right one…” Use the word, “Correct.”

Things to Make Sure They Don’t Do

1. Make sure that it is the correct medicine listed. Sometimes, the wrong medicine is given or the wrong dosage. Often, medical staff will administer a medication to which a patient has a known allergy. Make sure to know the patient’s allergies and to both receive and transfer it to the next family member.

2. Always make sure that the urine or blood sample is properly labeled. Many mistakes happen when these things are ascribed to the wrong patient.

3. Make sure the doctor or nurse doesn’t mix up patients. When any medical staff member visits, say the name of the patient and make sure they check the chart also.

Things You Should Do

1. Look around and try to identify any possible danger or risk.

2. Make sure the patient is turned or gets into a chair every two hours during the day to prevent bed sores. Most hospitals have beds that kind of do this, but it may not be enough. Learn to recognize the first stage of a bed sore—a reddened, darkened or discolored area on light skin. On darker skin, it may look purple, or blue or shiny. The spot may feel warm or hard.

3. Talk to the patient, so there will not be changes in his or her mental acuity.

4. The main caretaker should ask the doctor what the diagnosis is and what the plan is.

5. The main caretaker should try to gain insight into who everyone is, what their shifts are and make a list for all of the family members.

6. We should be careful not to be distracted by our phones whenever a medical person comes in.

This 14 point checklist fulfills numerous mitzvos in the Torah:

1. Hashavas aveida: The verse in Parshas Ki Seitzei (Devarim 22:2) discusses the mitzvah of hashavas aveida, returning a lost object, with the words, “V’hasheivoso lo—and you shall return it to him.” The Gemara in Sanhedrin (73a), however, includes within its understanding of these words the obligation of returning “his own life to him as well.” This verse is the source for the mitzvah of saving someone’s life. It is highly probable that it is to this general mitzvah that the Shulchan Aruch refers to in Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 325.

2. “V’nishmartem me’od l’nafshoseichem.” The Maharsha definitely states this pasuk from Devarim (4:15) refers also to following practical advice involving medical issues too …

3. “Thy brother’s blood.” There is a negative mitzvah of not standing idly by your brother’s blood—“Lo sa’amod al dam rei’echa,” (Vayikra 19:16). This is mentioned in Shulchan Aruch (Choshen Mishpat 426:1) and in the Rambam. When medical errors and such affect so many around us and we do nothing, we are violating the commandment of “Lo sa’amod al dam rei’echa.”

4. “Lo suchal l’hisalem.” There is yet another negative commandment associated with the positive commandment of hashavas aveida, and that is the verse in Devarim (22:3), “You cannot shut your eyes to it.” This verse comes directly after the mitzvah of hashavas aveida. The Netziv—Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehudah Berlin—in his Ha’emek She’eilah, refers to this mitzvah as well.

5. “V’chai achicha imach.” The She’iltos (She’ilta no. 37)—based upon the Gemara in Bava Metzia 62a—understands the words in Vayikra (25:36), “V’chai achicha imach—and your brother shall live with you,” to indicate an obligation to save others with you. The Netziv—in his Ha’emek She’eilah—understands it as a full-fledged obligation according to all opinions. He writes that one must exert every effort to save his friend’s life, until it becomes a matter of pikuach nefesh for himself.

6. “V’ahavta l’rei’acha kamocha.” The Ramban—in Toras Ha’adam Sha’ar Hasakanah (pages 42–43)—understands the verse of “And love thy neighbor as yourself,” as a directive to save our peers from medical danger as well.

7. Kibud av va’em—there is no question that watching over them in the hospital in this manner fulfills the mitzvah of kibud av va’em.

The author can be reached at [email protected]

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