The onset of the disease and the beginning of calculating the day of crisis

Some people argue that the beginning of the disease, from which they count when calculating the days of crisis, is the moment in time when the patient felt the manifestations of the disease, but others say: No, this is the time when the patient fell ill and the damage in the actions of the body manifested itself. This disagreement applies to fevers that do not occur suddenly; As for fevers that occur suddenly, the time of their onset does not remain hidden. This is similar to what happens to people who are suddenly struck by a fever, when the onset of a fever manifests itself in them in a clear way: the person did not have any flaw before this, and he went to bed or went to the bathhouse or was tired, and he suddenly became feverish.

If, with fever, fatigue, headache, and the like first appear, and only then fever occurs, then both questions cause disagreement. It is better to take into account the time of the onset of the fever itself, for here a violation of the natural state of nature is clearly manifested; As for the onset of the headache and weakness, this does not matter, and one cannot rely on the fact that the patient fell down and fell ill: after all, he often does not lie down even when the fever has already begun. If a woman has given birth and then develops a fever, then it should be counted from the onset of the fever, and not from the birth, as some doctors erroneously claim, and most often the fever then occurs after the second or third day.