Jump to content

Jehovah's Witnesses and blood transfusions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from JWs and blood)

Jehovah's Witnesses believe that the Bible prohibits Christians from accepting blood transfusions. Their literature states that, "'abstaining from ... blood' means not accepting blood transfusions and not donating or storing their own blood for transfusion."[1][2] The belief is based on an interpretation of scripture that differs from other Christian denominations.[3] It is one of the doctrines for which Jehovah's Witnesses are best known.[4]

Jehovah's Witnesses' literature teaches that their refusal of transfusions of whole blood or its four primary components—red cells, white cells, platelets, and plasma—is a non-negotiable religious stand and that those who respect life as a gift from God do not try to sustain life by taking in blood,[5][6] even in an emergency.[7] Witnesses are taught that the use of fractions such as albumin, immunoglobulins, and hemophiliac preparations are not absolutely prohibited and are instead a matter of personal choice.[6][8]

The doctrine was introduced in 1945 and has undergone some changes since then. Members of the group who voluntarily accept a transfusion and are not deemed repentant are regarded as having disassociated themselves from the group by abandoning its doctrines[9][10][11] and are subsequently shunned by members of the organization.[12] Although the majority of Jehovah's Witnesses accept the doctrine, a minority do not.[13][14]

The Watch Tower Society has established Hospital Information Services to provide education and facilitate bloodless surgery. This service also maintains Hospital Liaison Committees.[15]

Doctrine

[edit]

On the basis of various biblical texts, including Genesis 9:4, Leviticus 17:10, and Acts 15:28–15:29, Jehovah's Witnesses believe:

  • Blood represents life[16] and is sacred to God.[17][6] After it has been removed from a creature, the only use of blood that God has authorized is for the atonement of sins.[18] When a Christian abstains from blood, they are in effect expressing faith that only the shed blood of Jesus Christ can truly redeem them and save their life.[17]
  • Blood must not be eaten or transfused,[12][19] even in the case of a medical emergency.[7]
  • Blood leaving the body of a human or animal must be disposed of.[18]
  • Certain medical procedures involving blood fractions or that use a patient's own blood during the course of a medical procedure, such as hemodilution or cell salvage, are a matter of personal choice, according to what a person's conscience permits.[20]
  • A baptized Witness who unrepentantly accepts a blood transfusion is deemed to have disassociated himself from the group by abandoning its doctrines and is subsequently subject to organized shunning by other members.[10][12]

Certain medical procedures involving blood are specifically prohibited by Jehovah's Witnesses' blood doctrine. This includes the use of red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and blood plasma. Other fractions derived from blood are not prohibited. Watch Tower publications state that some products derived from one of the four primary components may be so similar to the function of the whole component and carry on such a life-sustaining role in the body that "most Christians would find them objectionable".[6] For procedures where there is no specific doctrinal prohibition, individuals are to obtain details from medical personnel and then make a personal decision.[21]

Prohibited procedures

[edit]

The following medical procedures are prohibited:

  • Transfusion of allogeneic whole blood, or of its constituents of red cells, white cells, platelets, or plasma.[22]
  • Transfusions of pre-operative self-donated (autologous) blood.[20]

Permitted procedures and products

[edit]

The following procedures and products are not prohibited and are left to the decision of individual members:[23]

  • Blood donation strictly for the purpose of further fractionation of red cells, white cells, platelets, or plasma for either allogeneic or autologous transfusion.[22][24]
  • Transfusions of autologous blood part of a "current therapy".[20]
  • Hemodilution, a modified technique in which equipment is arranged in a circuit that is constantly linked to the patient's circulatory system.[20]
  • Intraoperative blood salvage (autologous) or cell-saver scavenging, a method of collecting blood that has spilled from the circulatory system, washing and re-infusing it.[20]
  • Cardiopulmonary bypass, a method in which blood is diverted to an artificial heart-lung machine and directed back into the patient.[20]
  • Dialysis, wherein blood circulates through a machine, is filtered and cleaned, then returned to the patient.[20]
  • Epidural blood patch, consisting of a small amount of the patient's blood injected into the membrane surrounding the spinal cord.[20]
  • Plasmapheresis, wherein blood is withdrawn and filtered, having the plasma removed and substituted, and returned to the patient.[20]
  • Labeling or Tagging, blood is withdrawn, mixed with medicine, and then returned to the patient by transfusion.[20][25]
  • Platelet Gel, blood is withdrawn and put into a solution rich in platelets and white blood cells.[20]
  • Fractions from red blood cells:
    • Hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying component of red blood cells.
  • Fractions from white blood cells:[22]
  • Fractions from platelets:[22]
  • Fractions from blood plasma:[22]
  • Erythropoietin (EPO).[22]
  • PolyHeme, a blood substitute solution of chemically modified human hemoglobin.[22]
  • Hemopure, a blood substitute solution of chemically stabilized bovine hemoglobin derived from cow's blood.[22]

Bloodless surgery

[edit]

Many physicians have expressed a willingness to respect patients' preferences and provide bloodless treatment[27][need quotation to verify] and about 200 hospitals offer bloodless medicine and surgery programs for patients who wish to avoid or limit blood transfusions.[27] Bloodless surgery has been successfully performed in significant procedures including open-heart surgery and total hip replacements.[28] A 2012 study in JAMA Internal Medicine concluded that "Witnesses do not appear to be at increased risk for surgical complications or long-term mortality when comparisons are properly made by transfusion status. Thus, current extreme blood management strategies do not appear to place patients at heightened risk for reduced long-term survival." The study also stated that "Survival estimates of Witnesses were 86%, 69%, 51%, and 34% at 5, 10, 15, and 20 years after surgery, respectively, vs 74%, 53%, 35%, and 23% among non-Witnesses who received transfusions."[29]

Bloodless medical and surgical techniques have limitations, and surgeons say the use of various allogeneic blood products and pre-operative autologous blood transfusion are appropriate standards of care for certain patient presentations.[30][31] The Watch Tower Society states that in medical emergencies where blood transfusions seem to be the only available way to save a life, Jehovah's Witnesses request that doctors provide the best alternative care possible under the circumstances with respect for their personal conviction.[32] The Watch Tower Society has acknowledged that some members have died after refusing blood.[33]

In some countries, including Canada and the United Kingdom, a parent or guardian's decision can be legally overruled by medical staff. In this case, medical staff may act without consent, by obtaining a court order in a non-emergency situation, or without such in an emergency.[34][35] In Japan, children under 15 can be administered blood transfusions against their and their parents' wishes, and children between the ages of 15 and 18 can be similarly treated provided they, or at least one of their legal guardians, consent to the procedure.[36] In the United States, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that in cases of "an imminent threat to a child's life", physicians in some cases may "intervene over parental objections".[37]

Hospital Liaison Committees

[edit]

In 1988, the Watch Tower Society formed Hospital Information Services, a department to help locate doctors or surgical teams who are willing to perform medical procedures on Witnesses without blood transfusions.[38] The department was given oversight of each branch office's Hospital Information Desk,[39][40][41] and of one hundred Hospital Liaison Committees established throughout the United States.[32][42] As of 2003, about 200 hospitals worldwide provide bloodless medical programs.[27] As of 2006, there are 1,535 Hospital Liaison Committees worldwide coordinating communication between 110,000 physicians.[42][43]

Hospital Information Services researches medical journals to locate information on the availability and effectiveness of bloodless surgery methods.[32] It disseminates information about treatment options to local Hospital Liaison Committees, and to doctors and hospitals.[43]

Patient Visitation Groups

[edit]

Annually since 2004, Jehovah's Witnesses in the United States have been informed that "with your consent, the law allows for the elders to learn of your admission [to hospital] and provide spiritual encouragement",[44] but that "elders serving on a Patient Visitation Group [could] have access to your name" only if patients made their wishes known according to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).[45]

Jehovah's Witnesses' branch offices communicate directly with congregations regarding "ways to benefit from the activities of the Hospital Liaison Committee (HLC) and the Patient Visitation Group (PVG)."[46] A Jehovah's Witnesses publication in 2000 reported that Argentina had fewer than a hundred HLC committeemen "giving vital information to the medical community", adding that "their work is complemented by hundreds of other self-sacrificing elders who make up Patient Visitation Groups that call on Witness patients to help and encourage them".[47] Each branch office appoints PVG committeemen, who serve as volunteers.[48][49]

Acceptance among Jehovah's Witnesses

[edit]

Since the elaboration of the blood doctrine to the point of prohibiting transfusion, the majority of Jehovah's Witnesses have adopted the organization's position.[50][51] Those Jehovah's Witnesses who accept the blood doctrine typically hold strongly to their convictions.[52] In the August 1998 issue of Academic Emergency Medicine, Donald Ridley, a Jehovah's Witness and organization staff attorney, argued that carrying an up-to-date Medical Directive card issued by the organization indicates that an individual personally agrees with the established religious position of Jehovah's Witness.[53]

In 1958, The Watchtower reported on a particular member of Jehovah's Witnesses who voluntarily accepted blood transfusion, contrary to Watch Tower Society doctrine.[54] The organization confirms that members have accepted blood transfusions, despite the imposition in 1961 of a communal shunning policy for willful acceptance.[55][56]

In 1982, a peer-reviewed case study of a congregation of 59 Jehovah's Witnesses was undertaken by Drs. Larry J. Findley and Paul M. Redstone to evaluate individual belief in respect to blood among Jehovah's Witnesses. The researchers stated, "The members of this congregation are adamant in their refusal to accept all blood products... Not one of the members stated they would receive a blood transfusion even if their refusal meant death, Almost one-third of the respondents had personally refused blood transfusions". However, the study also showed that seven respondents were willing to accept plasma transplants and one member an autotransfusion, both therapies forbidden by Jehovah's Witnesses' doctrine. The researchers commented, "There is either some lack of understanding or refusal to follow doctrine among some members". The researchers noted that the contact details of the respondents were provided by congregation elders, which may have influenced the responses given.[57] Another peer-reviewed study examining medical records indicated a similar percentage of Jehovah's Witnesses willing to accept blood transfusions for their children. Young adults also showed a willingness to accept blood transfusions.[50] In another study, Jehovah's Witness patients presented for labor and delivery showed a willingness to accept some form of blood or blood products. Of these patients, 10 percent accepted whole blood transfusion.[51]

Watch Tower publications have noted that within religions, the personal beliefs of members often differ from official doctrine.[58] Regarding Jehovah's Witnesses' acceptance of the organization's official position on blood, Drs Cynthia Gyamfi and Richard Berkowitz state, "It is naïve to assume that all people in any religious group share the exact same beliefs, regardless of doctrine. It is well known that Muslims, Jews, and Christians have significant individual variations in their beliefs. Why should that not also be true of Jehovah's Witnesses?"[59]

Ambivalence and rejection of the blood doctrine dates back to at least the 1940s. After the Watch Tower Society established the doctrine, teaching that blood should not be eaten (c. 1927–1931), Margaret Buber, who was never a member of the denomination, offered a firsthand eyewitness account of Jehovah's Witnesses in the Nazi Ravensbrück concentration camp. She relates that an overwhelming majority were willing to eat blood sausage despite having alternate food to choose from, specifically after considering biblical statements regarding blood.[60]

History of doctrine

[edit]

From 1931,[61] when the name "Jehovah's witnesses" was adopted, Watch Tower Society publications maintained the view of Society founder Charles Taze Russell that the reference to abstaining from the eating of blood in the Apostolic Decree of Acts 15:19–29 was a "suggestion" to be given to Gentile converts.[62][63] Watch Tower publications during the presidency of Joseph Franklin Rutherford commended the commercial and emergency uses of blood.[64][65] A 1925 issue of The Golden Age commended a man for donating blood 45 times without payment.[66] In 1927, The Watchtower noted, without elaboration, that in Genesis 9, God decreed that Noah and his offspring "must not eat the blood, because the life is in the blood".[67] In 1940, Consolation magazine reported on a woman who accidentally shot herself with a revolver in her heart and survived a major surgical procedure during which an attending physician donated a quart of his own blood for transfusion.[68]

In 1944, with the Watch Tower Society under the administration of president Nathan Homer Knorr, The Watchtower asserted that the decrees contained in Genesis 9:4 and Leviticus 17:10–14 forbade the eating or drinking of blood in biblical times "whether by transfusion or by the mouth" and that this applied "in a spiritual way to the consecrated persons of good-will today, otherwise known as 'Jonadabs' of the Lord's 'other sheep'."[69]

In September 1945, representatives of the Watch Tower Society in the Netherlands commented on blood transfusion in the Dutch edition of Consolation. A translation of their comments into English reads:

When we lose our life because we refuse inoculations, that does not bear witness as a justification of Jehovah's name. God never issued regulations which prohibit the use of drugs, inoculations or blood transfusions. It is an invention of people, who, like the Pharisees, leave Jehovah's mercy and love aside.[70]

According to sociologist Richard Singelenbreg, the statement appearing in the Dutch edition of Consolation may have been published without knowledge of the doctrinal position published in the English July 1945 issue of Consolation by the Watch Tower Society's headquarters in the United States.[71]

In 1945, the application of the doctrine on blood was expanded to prohibit blood transfusions of whole blood, whether allogeneic or autologous.[72] The prohibition did not specify any punitive measures for accepting a transfusion, but by January 1961—in what was later described as an application of "increased strictness"[73]—it was ruled that it was a disfellowshipping offense to conscientiously accept a blood transfusion.[55] The Watch Tower Society warned that accepting a blood transfusion "may result in the immediate and very temporary prolongation of life, but that at the cost of eternal life for a dedicated Christian."[74]

In September 1956, Awake! stated, "certain blood fractions ... also come under the Scriptural ban".[75] A position against "the various blood fractions" was reiterated in September 1961.[76] In November of the same year, the doctrine was modified to allow individual members to decide whether they could conscientiously accept fractions used from blood for purposes such as vaccination.[77] This position has been expanded on since; the pre-formatted Durable Power of Attorney form provided by the Watch Tower Society includes an option for Jehovah's Witnesses to "accept all fractions derived from any primary component of blood."[78]

In 1964, Jehovah's Witnesses were prohibited from obtaining transfusions for pets, from using fertilizer containing blood, and were even advised (if their conscience troubled them) to write to dog food manufacturers to verify that their products were blood-free.[79] Later that year, it was stated that doctors or nurses who are Jehovah's Witnesses would not administer blood transfusions to fellow dedicated members. As to administering transfusions to non-members, The Watchtower stated that such a decision is "left to the Christian doctor's own conscience."[80]

In 1982, an article in The Watchtower stated that it would be wrong for Witnesses to allow leeches to feed on their own blood as part of a medical procedure, due to the sacredness of blood.[81]

In 1989, The Watchtower stated, "Each individual must decide" whether to accept hemodilution and autologous blood salvage (cell saver) procedures.[21] In 1990, a brochure entitled How Can Blood Save Your Life? was released, outlining Jehovah's Witnesses' general doctrine on blood.

In 2000, the Watch Tower Society's stand on blood fractions was clearly stated.[22] Members were instructed to personally decide if accepting a fraction would violate the doctrine on blood. In a later article, members were reminded that Jehovah's Witnesses do not donate blood or store their own blood prior to surgery.[20]

In May 2001, the Watch Tower Society revised its medical directives and identity cards addressing its doctrinal position on blood; the revised materials were distributed from May 3, 2001.[82] These revised documents specified that "allogeneic blood transfusions" were unacceptable whereas the former document (dated 1999) stated that "blood transfusions" were unacceptable. The revised 2001 documents were active until December 20, 2001. The Watch Tower Society then rescinded the revised document, stating, "After further review, it has been determined that the cards dated "md-E 6/01" and "ic-E 6/01" should not be used. Please destroy these items and make sure that they are not distributed to the publishers." Elders were instructed to revert to the older 1999 edition of the medical directives and identity cards.[83]

Watch Tower Society publications frequently claim negative consequences of blood transfusions:

  • A 1951 issue of The Watchtower stated: "And let the transfusion enthusiasts with a savior-complex ponder the fact that on many occasions transfusions do harm, spread disease, and frequently cause deaths, which, of course, are not publicized."[84]
  • A 1961 article in The Watchtower quoted Brazilian surgeon Dr. Américo Valério as saying transfusions were often followed by "moral insanity, sexual perversions, repression, inferiority complexes, petty crimes" and Dr Alonzo Jay Shadman claiming that a person's blood "contains all the peculiarities of the individual ... [including] hereditary taints, disease susceptibilities, poisons due to personal living, eating and drinking habits ... The poisons that produce the impulse to commit suicide, murder, or steal are in the blood."[85]
  • In 1969, Awake! reported on a man named Robert Khoury, who, after receiving a blood transfusion said, "When I recovered I found I had a terrible desire to steal."[86]
  • In 1974, Awake! cited a Centers for Disease Control report that as many as 35,000 deaths and 500,000 illnesses a year might be due to the presence of serum hepatitis in blood for transfusions.[87]
  • A 2006 issue of Awake! highlighted dangers from transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI).[88]

Critical views

[edit]

Opposition to the Watch Tower doctrines on blood transfusions has come from both members and non-members. A group of dissident Witnesses known as Associated Jehovah's Witnesses for Reform on Blood (AJWRB) states that there is no biblical basis for the prohibition of blood transfusions and seeks to have some policies changed.[13] In a series of articles in the Journal of Medical Ethics, US neurologist Osamu Muramoto, who is a medical adviser to the AJWRB, has raised issues including what he claims is coercion to refuse transfusions, doctrinal inconsistency, selective use of information by the Watch Tower Society to exaggerate the dangers of transfusions and the use of outdated medical beliefs.[89][90][9]

Scriptural interpretation

[edit]

Dissident Witnesses say the Society's use of Leviticus 17:12 to support its opposition to blood transfusions[91][92] conflicts with its own teachings that Christians are not under the Mosaic law.[93][89] Theologian Anthony Hoekema claims the blood prohibited in Levitical laws was not human, but animal. He cites other authors who support his view that the direction in Acts 15 to abstain from blood was intended not as an everlasting covenant but a means of maintaining a peaceful relationship between Jewish and Gentile Christians.[94][95] He has described as "absurd literalism" the Witnesses' use of a scriptural prohibition on eating blood to prohibit the medical transfusion of human blood.[96]

Coercion

[edit]

Osamu Muramoto has argued that the refusal by Jehovah's Witnesses of "life-saving" blood treatment[9] creates serious bio-medical ethical issues. He has criticized the "controlling intervention" of the Watch Tower Society by means of what he claims is information control and its policy of penalising members who accept blood transfusions or advocate freedom to choose blood-based treatment.[89][9] He says the threat of being classified as a disassociated Witness and subsequently shunned by friends and relatives who are members coerces Jehovah's Witnesses to accept and obey the prohibition on blood transfusions.[10][89][90] In one particular case involving a Russian district court decision, however, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) found nothing in the judgments to suggest that any form of improper pressure or undue influence was applied. It noted: "On the contrary, it appears that many Jehovah's Witnesses have made a deliberate choice to refuse blood transfusions in advance, free from time constraints of an emergency situation." The court said: "The freedom to accept or refuse specific medical treatment, or to select an alternative form of treatment, is vital to the principles of self-determination and personal autonomy. A competent adult patient is free to decide ... not to have a blood transfusion. However, for this freedom to be meaningful, patients must have the right to make choices that accord with their own views and values, regardless of how irrational, unwise or imprudent such choices may appear to others."[97]

Muramoto has claimed the intervention of Hospital Liaison Committees can add to "organisational pressure" applied by family members, friends, and congregation members on Witness patients to refuse blood-based treatment. He notes that while HLC members, who are church elders, "may give the patient 'moral support', the influence of their presence on the patient is known to be tremendous. Case reports reveal JW patients have changed their earlier decision to accept blood treatment after a visit from the elders." He claims such organizational pressure compromises the autonomy of Witness patients and interferes with their privacy and confidentiality. He has advocated a policy in which the Watch Tower organization and congregation elders would not question patients on the details of their medical care and patients would not disclose such information. He says the Society adopted such a policy in 1983 regarding details of sexual activity between married couples.[9][98][99]

Watch Tower spokesman Donald T. Ridley says neither elders nor HLC members are instructed or encouraged to probe into the health care decisions of Witness patients and do not involve themselves in patient hospitalisations unless patients request their assistance. Yet Watch Tower Society HLC representative David Malyon says he would respond to the "sin" of Witnesses he is privy to by effectively saying "Are you going to tell them or shall I!"[100] Nevertheless Ridley says Muramoto's suggestion that Witnesses should be free to disregard Watch Tower scriptural teachings and standards is preposterous. He says loving God means obeying commandments, not disobeying them, and hiding one's disobedience from others.[99][101]

Muramoto recommends doctors have a private meeting with patients to discuss their wishes, and that church elders and family members not be present, enabling patients to feel free of church pressure. He suggests doctors question patients on (a) whether they have considered that the Watch Tower Society might soon approve some medical practices they currently find objectionable, in the same manner that it has previously abandoned its opposition to vaccination and organ transplants; (b) whether Witness patients know which blood components are allowed and which are prohibited, and whether they acknowledge that those rulings are organizational policy rather than biblical teachings; and (c) whether they realize that although some Bible scriptures proscribe the eating of blood, eating and transfusing blood have entirely different effects on the body.[90] HLC representative David Malyon has responded that Muramoto's suggested questions are an affront to coerce Jehovah's Witnesses with a "complicated philosophical inquisition" and, if used by doctors, would be "an abusive transformation of the medical role of succour and care into that of devil's advocate and trickster".[100]

Selective use of information

[edit]

Muramoto has claimed many Watch Tower Society publications employ exaggeration and emotionalism to emphasize the dangers of transfusions and the advantages of alternative treatments but present a distorted picture by failing to report any benefits of blood-based treatment. Nor do its publications acknowledge that in some situations, including rapid and massive haemorrhage, there are no alternatives to blood transfusions.[89][90] He states that Watch Tower Society publications often discuss the risk of death as a result of refusing blood transfusions, but give little consideration to the prolonged suffering and disability, producing an added burden on family and society, that can result from refusal.[90] Attorney and former Witness Kerry Louderback-Wood[102] also claims that Witness publications exaggerate the medical risks of taking blood and the efficiency of non-blood medical therapies in critical situations.[103]

Douglas E. Cowan, an academic in the sociology of religion, has claimed that members of the Christian countercult movement who criticize the Watch Tower Society make selective use of information themselves. For example, Christian apologist Richard Abanes wrote that their ban on blood transfusions "has led to countless Witness deaths over the years, including many children."[104] Cowan wrote: "When the careful reader checks [Abanes' footnote], however, looking perhaps for some statistical substantiation, he or she finds only a statistical conjecture based on 1980 Red Cross blood use figures." Cowan also says Abanes omits "critical issues" in an attempt to "present the most negative face possible." Cowan wrote that "the reader is left with the impression that the Watchtower Society knowingly presides over a substantial number of preventable deaths each year."[105]

Outdated medical beliefs

[edit]

Osamu Muramoto says the Watch Tower Society relies on discarded, centuries-old medical beliefs to support its assertion that blood transfusions are the same as eating blood.[106] The Watch Tower Society's 1990 brochure How Can Blood Save Your Life? quoted a 17th-century anatomist (Thomas Bartholin) to support its view.[107] Muramoto says the view that blood is nourishment—still espoused in Watch Tower publications[108]—was abandoned by modern medicine many decades ago.[89] He has criticized an analogy commonly used by the Society[109] in which it states: "Consider a man who is told by the doctor that he must abstain from alcohol. Would he be obedient if he quit drinking alcohol but had it put directly into his veins?"[106] Muramoto says the analogy is false, explaining: "Orally ingested alcohol is absorbed as alcohol and circulated as such in the blood, whereas orally eaten blood is digested and does not enter the circulation as blood. Blood introduced directly into the veins circulates and functions as blood, not as nutrition. Hence, blood transfusion is a form of cellular organ transplantation. And ... organ transplants are now permitted by the WTS."[89] He says the objection to blood transfusions on the basis of biblical proscriptions against eating blood is similar to the refusal of a heart transplant on the basis that a doctor warned a patient to abstain from eating meat because of his high cholesterol level.[90]

David Malyon, chairman of the English Hospital Liaison Committee in Luton, England, has claimed that Muramoto's discussion of the differences between consuming blood and alcohol is pedantic and says blood laws in the Bible are based upon the reverence for life and its association with blood, and that laws should be kept in the spirit as much as in the letter.[100]

Inconsistency

[edit]

Muramoto has described as peculiar and inconsistent the Watch Tower policy of acceptance of all the individual components of blood plasma as long as they are not taken at the same time.[89] He says the Society offers no biblical explanation for differentiating between prohibited treatments and those considered a "matter of conscience", explaining the distinction is based entirely on arbitrary decisions of the Governing Body, to which Witnesses must adhere strictly on the premise of them being Bible-based truth.[89] He has questioned why white blood cells (1 per cent of blood volume) and platelets (0.17 per cent) are forbidden, yet albumin (2.2 per cent of blood volume) is permitted.[89] He has questioned why donating blood and storing blood for autologous transfusion is deemed wrong, but the Watch Tower Society permits the use of blood components that must be donated and stored before Witnesses use them.[90] He has questioned why Witnesses, although viewing blood as sacred and symbolizing life, are prepared to let a person die by placing more importance on the symbol than the reality it symbolizes.[90]

Kerry Louderback-Wood says that by labeling the currently acceptable blood fractions as "minute" in relation to whole blood, the Watch Tower Society causes followers to misunderstand the scope and extent of allowed fractions.[103]

The Watch Tower Society's response is that the real issue is not of the fluid per se, but of respect and obedience to God.[77][110] They say their principle of abstaining from blood as a display of respect is demonstrated by the fact that members are allowed to eat meat that still contains some blood. As soon as blood is drained from an animal, the respect has been shown to God, and then a person can eat the meat even though it may contain a small amount of blood.[77] Jehovah's Witnesses' view of meat and blood is different from that of kosher Jewish adherents, who go to great lengths to remove minor traces of blood.[111][112]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Keep Yourself in God's Love. Watch Tower Society. 2008. p. 77.
  2. ^ "Acts 15:29". NET Bible. 2014. that you abstain from meat that has been sacrificed to idols and from blood and from what has been strangled and from sexual immorality. If you keep yourselves from doing these things, you will do well. Farewell.
  3. ^ Brachear, Manya A. (October 9, 2012). "More doctors honor religious objections to blood transfusions". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on November 3, 2012.
  4. ^ Evans, Allan S.; Moynes, Riley E.; Martinello, Larry (1973). What man Believes: A study of the World's Great Faiths. McGraw-Hill Ryerson. p. 361. ISBN 978-0-07-077440-7. Two elements of belief are probably better known than any other among non-Witnesses. One is the refusal to fight in war ... the other well-known belief is the refusal to accept blood transfusions.
  5. ^ How Can Blood Save Your Life?. Watch Tower Society. 1990. pp. 3–7.
  6. ^ a b c d "Be Guided by the Living God". The Watchtower. June 15, 2004. pp. 19–24.
  7. ^ a b "Godly Respect for Blood". The Watchtower. September 1, 1986. p. 25.
  8. ^ Dixon, J. Lowell (November 27, 1981). "Jehovah's Witnesses: The Surgical/Ethical Challenge". JAMA. 246 (21): 2471–2472. doi:10.1001/jama.1981.03320210037021. PMID 7299971.
  9. ^ a b c d e Muramoto, O (December 1999). "Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah's Witnesses: Part 3. A proposal for a don't-ask-don't-tell policy". Journal of Medical Ethics. 25 (6): 463–8. doi:10.1136/jme.25.6.463. PMC 479294. PMID 10635499.
  10. ^ a b c Muramoto, O. (January 6, 2001). "Bioethical aspects of the recent changes in the policy of refusal of blood by Jehovah's Witnesses". BMJ. 322 (7277): 37–39. doi:10.1136/bmj.322.7277.37. PMC 1119307. PMID 11141155.
  11. ^ Little, Jane (June 14, 2000). "Jehovah's Witnesses drop transfusion ban". BBC News. Archived from the original on June 18, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2010.
  12. ^ a b c Jehovah's Witnesses Public Affairs Office press release, June 14, 2000.
  13. ^ a b Elder, Lee (2000). "Why some Jehovah's Witnesses accept blood and conscientiously reject official Watchtower Society blood policy". Journal of Medical Ethics. 26 (5): 375–380. doi:10.1136/jme.26.5.375. PMC 1733296. PMID 11055042.
  14. ^ Blackwell, Tom (December 20, 2012). "Without fanfare, Jehovah's Witnesses quietly soften position on blood transfusions". National Post. Archived from the original on January 29, 2013. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  15. ^ Smith, Stephen. "Jehovah's Witnesses defend hospital visits that push for bloodless treatment". CBC News. Retrieved September 13, 2023.
  16. ^ How Can Blood Save Your Life. Watch Tower Society. 1990. p. 24. God told all mankind that they must not eat blood. Why? Because blood represents life.
  17. ^ a b "The Real Value of Blood". Awake!. August 2006. p. 11. He also gave them his reason, equating blood with the soul, or life, of the creature. He later said: 'The soul [or life] is in the blood.' In the eyes of the Creator, blood is sacred. It represents the precious gift of life that each living soul possesses.
  18. ^ a b "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. February 1, 1997. p. 29.
  19. ^ "Godly Respect for Life and Blood". The Watchtower. June 1, 1969. pp. 326–327.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. October 15, 2000. pp. 30–31.
  21. ^ a b "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. March 1, 1989. pp. 30–31.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. June 15, 2000. pp. 29–31.
  23. ^ "How Do I View Blood Fractions and Medical Procedures Involving My Own Blood?". Our Kingdom Ministry. November 1, 2006. pp. 3–4.
  24. ^ Jehovah's Witness letter to Cliff Roche, July 30, 2001 (Published in the book Three Dissertations on the Teachings of Jehovah's Witnesses, by Greg Stafford, 2002 ISBN 0-9659814-2-8)
  25. ^ Anonymous (2005). "Instructions for Filling In the Advance Decision Document". Letter to Jehovah's Witness congregations. Watch Tower Society. p. 1.
  26. ^ West, James (2011). "Informed Refusal — the Jehovah's Witness Patient". Clinical Ethics in Anesthesiology: A Case-Based Textbook. Cambridge University Press: 19–26.
  27. ^ a b c Ariga et al., Legal Medicine, 5 (2003) S72-S75.
  28. ^ "RWJUH: Bloodless Surgery". Archived from the original on August 28, 2005. Retrieved March 1, 2006., "The University Center for Bloodless Surgery and Medicine at University Hospital, Newark, NJ". Archived from the original on April 6, 2006. Retrieved March 1, 2006., "Bloodless Case Studies: The University Center for Bloodless Surgery and Medicine at University Hospital in Newark, NJ". Archived from the original on May 2, 2006. Retrieved March 1, 2006. "Blood Conservation, Alternatives and Avoidance". NoBlood.org. Archived from the original on April 5, 2004. —successful cases of bloodless surgery.
  29. ^ Pattakos, Gregory; Koch, Colleen G.; Brizzio, Mariano E.; Batizy, Lillian H.; Sabik, Joseph F.; Blackstone, Eugene H.; Lauer, Michael S. (2012). "Outcome of Patients Who Refuse Transfusion After Cardiac Surgery". JAMA Internal Medicine. 172 (15): 1154–60. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2012.2449. PMID 22751620.
  30. ^ Goodnough, Lawrence T.; Shander, Aryeh; Spence, Richard (May 1, 2003). "Bloodless medicine: clinical care without allogenic blood transfusion". Transfusion. 43 (5): 668–676. doi:10.1046/j.1537-2995.2003.00367.x. PMID 12702192. S2CID 34175614.
  31. ^ Jabbour, Nicolas (2005). Transfusion-Free Medicine. p. 13.
  32. ^ a b c "Are You Ready to Face a Faith-Challenging Medical Situation?". Our Kingdom Ministry. November 1, 1990. p. 3.
  33. ^ "Youths Who Have Power Beyond What Is Normal". Awake!. May 22, 1994. pp. 9–15.
  34. ^ Richards, Edward; Rathbun, Katharine (1983). "Medical Risk Management: Preventive Legal Strategies for Health Care Providers". biotech.law.lsu.edu/Books/aspen/Aspen.html. Chapter Nine, The Emergency Exception: Aspen Systems Corporation. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 12, 2014.
  35. ^ Hartman, Kurt; Liang, Bryan (March 1999). "Exceptions to Informed Consent in Emergency Medicine" (PDF). Hospital Physician. 35 (3): 53–55. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
  36. ^ Ohto, Hitoshi; Yonemura, Yuji; Takeda, Junzo; Inada, Eiichi; Hanada, Ryoji; Hayakawa, Satoshi; Miyano, Takeshi; Kai, Katsunori; Iwashi, Waichiro; Muto, Kaori; Asai, Fumikazu (July 1, 2009). "Guidelines for managing conscientious objection to blood transfusion". Transfusion Medicine Reviews. 23 (3): 221–28. doi:10.1016/j.tmrv.2009.03.004. PMID 19539876. S2CID 8885828.
  37. ^ American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Bioethics (1997). "Religious objections to medical care". Pediatrics. 99 (2): 279–281. doi:10.1542/peds.99.2.279. PMID 9024462. S2CID 78983202.
  38. ^ "Hospital Information Services". Our Kingdom Ministry. September 1, 1988. p. 4.
  39. ^ Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watch Tower Society. 1998. p. 23.
  40. ^ Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watch Tower Society. 1996. p. 26.
  41. ^ "Bridging the Gap Between Doctors and Witness Patients". Awake!. November 22, 1990. p. 21.
  42. ^ a b "Certificate of Recognition issued by Society for the Advancement of Blood Management". Watch Tower Society. September 1, 2002. Archived from the original on March 6, 2012.
  43. ^ a b January 3, 2006 Letter from Christian Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses; To all Congregations
  44. ^ "Announcements". Our Kingdom Ministry. November 1, 2005. p. 3.
  45. ^ "Announcements". Our Kingdom Ministry. October 1, 2004. p. 7.
  46. ^ "Service Meeting Schedule". Our Kingdom Ministry. January 1, 2006. p. 2.
  47. ^ Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watch Tower Society. 2001. p. 212.
  48. ^ ""Follow Me Continually"". Our Kingdom Ministry. May 1, 2006. p. 1.
  49. ^ Come Be My Follower. Watch Tower Society. pp. 178–179.
  50. ^ a b Benson, Kaaron (November 1995). "Management of the Jehovah's Witness Oncology Patient: Perspective of the Transfusion Service". Cancer Control. 2 (4). Moffitt Cancer Center. Archived from the original on March 13, 2007. Therefore, while most adult Jehovah's Witness patients were unwilling to accept blood for themselves, most Jehovah's Witness parents permitted transfusions for their minor children, and many of the young adult patients also were willing to accept transfusions for themselves.
  51. ^ a b Gyamfi C, Berkowitz RL (September 2004). "Responses by pregnant Jehovah's Witnesses on health care proxies". Obstet Gynecol. 104 (3): 541–4. doi:10.1097/01.AOG.0000135276.25886.8e. PMID 15339766. S2CID 8771835. This review refutes the commonly held belief that all Jehovah's Witnesses refuse to accept blood or any of its products. In this population of pregnant women, the majority were willing to accept some form of blood or blood products.
  52. ^ Knuti KA, Amrein PC, Chabner BA, Lynch TJ, Penson RT (2002). "Faith, identity, and leukemia: when blood products are not an option". Oncologist. 7 (4): 371–80. doi:10.1634/theoncologist.7-4-371. PMID 12185299. S2CID 24259911. Ms. LF stated that she was a Jehovah's Witness and asserted with an advanced [sic] directive that she did not want blood product support. … The risks and benefits of continuing therapy were discussed with Ms. LF. She remained adamant in her refusal of blood products and repeated that she wanted to continue treatment and to 'die fighting' her disease.
  53. ^ Migden DR, Braen GR (August 1998). "The Jehovah's Witness blood refusal card: ethical and medicolegal considerations for emergency physicians". Acad Emerg Med. 5 (8): 815–24. doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.1998.tb02510.x. PMID 9715245.
    Ridley DT (August 1998). "Honoring Jehovah's Witnesses' advance directives in emergencies: a response to Drs. Migden and Braen". Acad Emerg Med. 5 (8): 824–35. doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.1998.tb02511.x. PMID 9715246.
  54. ^ "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. August 1, 1958. p. 478.
  55. ^ a b "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. January 15, 1961. p. 63.
  56. ^ "Setting Matters Straight Between God and You". The Watchtower. October 15, 1987. p. 14. Three areas for attention were mentioned: secretly accepting a blood transfusion, masturbation, and alcohol abuse. After considering that material, quite a number of readers wrote letters of appreciation; they admitted that they had had those faults, but they had been moved to repent and change.
  57. ^ Findley LJ, Redstone PM (March 1982). "Blood transfusion in adult Jehovah's Witnesses. A case study of one congregation". Arch Intern Med. 142 (3): 606–7. doi:10.1001/archinte.142.3.606. PMID 7065795. there is either some lack of understanding or refusal to follow doctrine among some members ... Our research methods are open to sample bias. By surveying only church members, we may not have described the beliefs of less religious Jehovah's Witnesses. Although we stressed the strict confidentiality of the questionnaire, the members knew that the church had cooperated in the study to the point of supplying a list of the names and addresses of its members. This may have influenced their answers. Despite these problems, we believe we adequately described the beliefs of this congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses and demonstrated the need for physicians to be aware of their patients' religious objections to medical treatment
    The article presents the results of a study to determine the medical needs and beliefs of one congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses in Denver by mailing a questionnaire to the 70 adult members. 59 responses were received. Of the 59, 7 stipulated they would accept plasma transfusion (Table 1 on page 607).
  58. ^ "Where Are the Faithful?". Awake!. April 8, 1996. p. 4. Nowadays official church dogma may bear scant resemblance to the personal beliefs of those who profess that particular religion.
  59. ^ Thomas JM (February 1, 2005). "Responses by pregnant Jehovah's Witnesses on health care proxies". Obstet Gynecol. 105 (2): 441, author reply 442–3. doi:10.1097/01.AOG.0000149842.31312.e4. PMID 15684182.
  60. ^ Buber M (1949). Under Two Dictators. pp. 222, 235–237. Buber indicates that Jehovah's Witness prisoners ate blood sausage until around 1943. She relates that 25 of the 275 Jehovah's Witness prisoners then refused to eat blood sausage. She underlines the fact that this occurred in the presence of knowledge of Biblical statements regarding blood.
  61. ^ Jehovah's Witnesses—Proclaimers of God's Kingdom. Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. pp. 151–152.
  62. ^ "The Apostolic Council". Zion's Watch Tower. November 15, 1892. It will be noticed that nothing is said about keeping the ten commandments, nor any part of the Jewish law. It was evidently taken for granted that having received the spirit of Christ the new law of love would be a general regulation for them. The things mentioned were merely to guard against stumbling themselves or becoming stumbling blocks to others.
  63. ^ "Settling Doctrinal Differences". The Watchtower. April 15, 1909. pp. 116–117. These prohibitions had never come to the Gentiles, because they had never been under the Law Covenant; but so deeply rooted were the Jewish ideas on this subject that it was necessary to the peace of the Church that the Gentiles should observe this matter also ... these items thus superadded to the Law of Love should be observed by all spiritual Israelites as representing the Divine will.
  64. ^ "Manufacturing and Mining". The Golden Age. October 15, 1919. p. 47. A serious difficulty which has been overcome in the use of plywood for airplanes construction was the making from blood of a glue that will stand any quantity of moisture without letting go…. In this plywood, stronger than steel, we have an illustration of how the Lord can take characters, weak in themselves, and surround them with such influence and so fortify them by his promises as to make them "mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds" of error and sin.
  65. ^ "Here and There Over the Planet". The Golden Age. December 17, 1924. p. 163. Fearing the death of the child, the woman deliberately cut her arms and breast with glass from the windshield to provide blood to keep the child alive during the cold nights. The child will recover, but the heroine is expected to die.
  66. ^ "Flotsam and Jetsam". The Golden Age. July 29, 1925. p. 683.
  67. ^ "One Reason for God's Vengeance". The Watchtower. December 15, 1927. p. 371.
  68. ^ "Surgery". Consolation. December 25, 1940. p. 19. one of the attending physicians in the great emergency gave a quart of his own blood for transfusion, and today the woman lives and smiles gaily over what happened to her in the busiest 23 minutes of her life.
  69. ^ "The Stranger's Right Maintained". The Watchtower. December 1, 1944. p. 362.
  70. ^ Vertroosting (Consolation), September 1945 p. 29, "Wanneer wij ons leven verliezen, doordat wij weigeren, inspuitingen te laten maken, dient zulks niet tot een getuigenis ter rechtvaardiging van Jehova's Naam. God heeft nooit bepalingen uitgevaardigd die het gebruik van medicijnen, inspuitingen of bloedtransfusie verbiedt. Het is een ultvinding van menschen, die gelijk de Farizeën Jehova's barmhartigheid laten." (in Dutch).
  71. ^ Singelenbreg, R. (1990). "The Blood Transfusion Taboo of Jehovah's Witnesses: Origin, Development and Function of a Controversial Doctrine". Social Science & Medicine. 31 (4): 516.
  72. ^ "Immovable For the Right Worship". The Watchtower. July 1, 1945. pp. 198–201.
  73. ^ "Assume Your Christian Obligations". The Watchtower. March 1, 1966. p. 142. In the counsel from the pages of this magazine there has been a note of increased strictness with regard to pure worship, the placing of additional obligations on each one individually, strict counsel on morals, honesty, neutrality and such requirements as showing respect for the sanctity of blood.
  74. ^ Blood, Medicine, and the Law of God. Watch Tower Society. 1961. p. 54.
  75. ^ "Blood Fractions or Substances". Awake!. September 8, 1956. p. 20.
  76. ^ "Respect for the Sanctity of Blood". The Watchtower. September 15, 1961. p. 558.
  77. ^ a b c "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. November 1, 1961. pp. 669–670.
  78. ^ Durable Power of Attorney form, published by Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, January 2001 p. 1
  79. ^ "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. February 15, 1964. pp. 127–128.
  80. ^ "Employment and Your Conscience". The Watchtower. November 15, 1964. pp. 680–683.
  81. ^ "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. June 15, 1982. p. 31.
  82. ^ Letter to All Presiding Overseers and Secretaries in the United States, The Watchtower May 3, 2001, and Enclosure
  83. ^ Letter to All Presiding Overseers and Secretaries in the United States, The Watchtower, December 20, 2001
  84. ^ "Questions From Readers". The Watchtower. July 1, 1951. p. 414.
  85. ^ "Using Life in Harmony with the Will of God". The Watchtower. September 15, 1961. pp. 563–564.
  86. ^ "Watching the World". Awake!. July 8, 1969. p. 30.
  87. ^ "When Doctors Seek to Force Blood Transfusions". Awake!. May 22, 1974. p. 18.
  88. ^ "Transfusion Medicine—Is Its Future Secure?". Awake!. August 1, 2006.
  89. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Muramoto O (August 1998). "Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah's Witnesses: Part 1. Should bioethical deliberation consider dissidents' views?". J Med Ethics. 24 (4): 223–230. doi:10.1136/jme.24.4.223. PMC 1377670. PMID 9752623.
  90. ^ a b c d e f g h Muramoto O (1998). "Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah's Witnesses: Part 2. A novel approach based on rational non-interventional paternalism". J Med Ethics. 24 (5): 295–301. doi:10.1136/jme.24.5.295. PMC 1377601. PMID 9800583.
  91. ^ "Rightly Value Your Gift of Life". The Watchtower. June 15, 2004. p. 15.
  92. ^ United in Worship of the Only True God. Watch Tower Society. 1983. p. 160.
  93. ^ "What Does Jehovah Ask of Us Today?". The Watchtower. September 15, 1999. p. 21.
  94. ^ Bruce, F. F. (1955). Commentary on Acts. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
  95. ^ Lenski, R. C. H. (1944). The Interpretation of the Acts of the Apostles. Columbus, Ohio: Wartburg Press.
  96. ^ Hoekema, Anthony A. (1963). The Four Major Cults. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans. pp. 249, 250. ISBN 978-0-8028-3117-0.
  97. ^ "ECHR Point number 136, 139". Archived from the original on May 26, 2011. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
  98. ^ "Honor Godly Marriage!". The Watchtower. March 15, 1983. p. 31.
  99. ^ a b ""Call for new approach to transfusion refusals", The Irish Times, February 27, 2010". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on January 14, 2011. Retrieved May 31, 2010.
  100. ^ a b c Malyon, D (1998). "Transfusion-free treatment of Jehovah's Witnesses: respecting the autonomous patient's motives". J Med Ethics. 24 (6): 376–81. doi:10.1136/jme.24.6.376. PMC 479136. PMID 9873976.
  101. ^ Ridley, Donald T. (1999). "Jehovah's Witnesses' refusal of blood: obedience to scripture and religious conscience". Journal of Medical Ethics. 25: 471. Archived from the original on July 16, 2012.
  102. ^ ""Religion Today", New York Times, January 6, 2006". Archived from the original on April 27, 2010. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  103. ^ a b "Jehovah's Witnesses, Blood Transfusions and the Tort of Misrepresentation". Journal of Church and State. 47 (4): 808. Autumn 2005. [The Watch Tower Society] builds a case that other doctors wish all surgeons would become bloodless surgeons, when in fact those doctors recognize the benefits of blood transfusions for those who are in desperate need.
  104. ^ Cults, New Religious Movements, and Your Family: A Guide to Ten Non-Christian Groups Out to Convert Your Loved Ones p. 226
  105. ^ Bearing False Witness? An Introduction to the Christian Countercult p. 146
  106. ^ a b Reasoning From the Scriptures. Watch Tower Society. 1989. p. 73.
  107. ^ How Can Blood Save Your Life?. Watch Tower Society. 1990. p. 6.
  108. ^ Reasoning From the Scriptures. Watch Tower Society. 1989. p. 70.
  109. ^ The analogy is used in The Watchtower, June 1, 1969, page 326, The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life, (1981, pg 167), Reasoning From the Scriptures (1989, pg 73), You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth (1989, pg 216), Yearbook (1989, pg 57), What Does the Bible Teach (2005, pg 130) and Awake!, August 2006, page 11.
  110. ^ What Does The Bible Really Teach?. Watch Tower Society. 2005. p. 128.
  111. ^ "OK Kosher Certification—Salting of Meat". Archived from the original on May 20, 2007. Retrieved February 7, 2007.
  112. ^ "My Jewish Learning: Making Meat Kosher". Archived from the original on February 25, 2009.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]