Elderly post CVA in rehabilitation therapy – Yom Kippur fast
I am aged 73. In January 2013 I had a CVA and still today I receive rehabilitation therapy. I asked my family doctor (not
I am a rabbi and I am about to teach a course on Jewish bioethics. I would like to receive a teshuva (or teshuvot) on cloning.
Another question, although completely theoretical: I once heard about a teshuva on brain transplants. I know it may sound a little awkward, but as a theoretical approach it may be very interesting.
Regarding a teshuva on cloning, enclosed please find an article by Professor Avraham Steinberg and Dr. John Loike on cloning. This article will appear in the upcoming issue of our English-language journal of halakha and medicine, Assia-Jewish Medical Ethics (vol. 3, no. 2).
In response to your question about brain transplants, Professor Avraham Steinberg writes:
For now there is a complete moratorium on whole brain transplants. There is universal agreement that such a transplant is unethical because in order to obtain a good brain the donor must be killed, and according to halakha it is forbidden to kill one person in order to save another.
However, brain tissue transplants from miscarried or aborted fetuses—which, so far, have been unsuccessful—are halakhically permissible if they will be useful to the patient—for example, in the case of Parkinson’s disease—provided that the abortion was halakhically valid per se.
I am aged 73. In January 2013 I had a CVA and still today I receive rehabilitation therapy. I asked my family doctor (not
מצורפות שתי שאלות שנשאלתי, וכמדומני שהרב עם ידיעתו ברפואה, ובמיוחד (לגבי שאלה ב) התמחותו בעניין התאמת דברי חז"ל עם המציאות הידועה לנו, יוכל לעזור לי
שלום רב. אני נשואה ויש לי שני ילדים. כחצי שנה שאני מנסה להיכנס להיריון, אך מסתבר שיום הטבילה מתרחש כ- 4 ימים אחרי הביוץ. יש