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Jehovah's Witnesses and The Question of Blood, 1977

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TABLE OF CONTE TS
Wi~'

Do Jehov h s "Vi

csses Not Accept Bloo

mood As Mediclr
Is Refusing Blood a Form of Suicide:?
The Doctor's ole
When Cblld reo Are In -olved
Is t
'cally !Ill"e'at;Sonable to Refu~ Blood?
Blood Tl'ans!u, ons-How Dangerous?
Al terna tive T
api
ajar Surgery WI ,hout Blood
'What 'Will You Do?
Re ar !!lees

Copyright. 1977
WATCH TO 1m. . I
AND TRACT SOCIETY
OF PENNSYLV
IA

Pum.I:

W J,.'l'CHTG

ItS

AND' 1nACT SOClll."I'Y

()F NEw 1'OF.K,

IN

NATION~

BROG

BmL
N

C.

~'T DKNTS AsSOCIATION

Yo

U.S.A.

'_Me tn the Unl.u:d S t.es Q! Ame.rlca

4:

17
2D
24
33
38

41
49

55
58
,6

Jehovah's Witnesses and he

Question of Blood
LOOD is vital to life. ThoUgh this bas been
recognized from anc ent times, . modern r~
search is pro 'ding a greater understand"ng of
its life-sustaining fun Ions.
Tbe p ractice of transfusing uman blood hGlds
a promInent position on modern. m edical care.
T ().sc in the medical field and many otbe~ regard
the transfer of blood from one human to anot er
as a accepted therapeutic
etho +'1. But there
are people who do not accept blood tran 'fusions.
They
e Jeh.ovah's W"tnesses
Je 0 ah~s W itnesses cherish ,a nd deeply respect
lme~ This is one of the reasons why they do not
smoke, use addictive drugs or seek abort~ons.
They have earned from t e Bible to. view life
as sacred7 something to be protected and prese ved both for themselves and for their children.
Why, then, do J ,e bo ,a h's \Vitnesses object to
blood transfusio ? s there some rational basis
for th " conviction that tbey hold to even in th
face of death? And 's their posi tion on the matter
totally incompatible with modern medieal !mowl
edge ,a nd principles?
This topic shot- d be of "nterest to @'v eryone in
. Source :nm erial for references. pa,g:e;s &-&1.
3

1IEHOYAJIm'$ WitNeSS ES

A~

TJ-tE QUESTil O ..... OF fU.oOD

thc medical profession, for at any time a doctor


m.ay be ,c onfronted with the b100d transfusion
issue. This is quite poss[b 'c, as there are more
than twomi lion of J'ehovahs Wiblcsses earth
wide. Probably some of them are Jiving in your
community_ The following is written to aid doctors to understand ..Jehovah t Witnesses a s patients and to consider how their vie
,c an be
reasonably acco:m:modated, First we will exruni.ne
thc religious basis for their position. Then, beginning on page 17, we wn consider the ,e thics, involved and some recent findings and observations
by qualified doctors that may be of practical
value in resolving problems regarding the use
of blood.
Even persons who are not in the medical field
are invited to look into tbis inlpot'tant Illatte:r"_
The positon that Jehovah's Witnesses take on
blood actually involves r'ghts and principles that
can affect each one of us. And a knowledge o,f
what they believe. and whYt will aid a per on to
understand bettoer this i ssue that has often been
of concern to doctors. jurists, and students of
the B~ble. What, then, are thc key factors in the
issue?
XJJE ;RET,IQIOUS BASIS

Most doctors "view the use 0 blood essentially


as a matt.er of medical ju~ent, much as their
daily decisions about using cerro n medkines or
surgical procedures, Other persons may view the
position of Jehovah's Witnesses as more of a
moral or legal question. They may think: in terms

JEHO VAH'S WHN a$ES A N D 'liHE Q UesTiON

Of' stOOl)

of the right to ' ife, authority to make decisions


about one's own body. or the civil obligations of
the governm,e nt to protect the Iiyes of its citizens.
These aspects aU bear on the matter. Ye-t the
stand taken by Jehovah's Witnesse s is aVQ'!.;"C all

cw; it is a positionbasBd OJ! what


the Bible says.
:M any persons may wonder about the validIty
a religiO'US

,o f the above statemen.t_ They are aware that


numerous churches support the use 'o f bJood t establishing blood-bank:progmms and encouraging the
donation ,o f blood. Accordingly, the questio n logi"
cally at':ises:

What does the Bible ,s ay about humans taking


bl,ood in~tQ t/,eir bodies?
Even individuals who do not pers onally view

the Bible to be the inspired word of G od. must


acknowledge that i t has n~uch to say about bl'o od.
Fl'Oln the first book of' the Bible through to the
last, 'b]ood~' is mention ed more than four hundred
times. Certain Bible verses a r e especi ally pertinent
to the question of s ustaining life with blood. Let
US briefly examine t.hem:
The Bible record shows that early in :ma.nJrind7 s
hist()l~y the Creator and Life-Giver expressed him"
self on t he issue of blood. Right after the gl.obal
flood, when 'G od fu-st granted humans the right to
eat animal flesh" he commandC?d Noah and his
fanlily; "Every moving anlmal that . s alive may
OOl"VC as, food tor you. As n the case of green vegemUon, I do give it all to you~ Only flesh w~th its

J EHOY H'S W ITNESSES AND TtL QUESTI ON OF

lOOD

soul- "ts bloodi-you must not eat.n--Gene.sis '9 :


3, 4Firs t of all, the Creator was providing a dietary
regulation a t a time h n
ankind was making
a new start (Compare G@nesis 1:29.) Godshowed"
however, that in kjllin ' animals for food more was
invo ved than di.et~ That was because Ute blood of
a ,c reature epresented it"> life Qr its soul. Thus
Bible transiatio:ns, render Genesis 9 ;,4 as ~
"Only you shall not ,e at flesh '!,vith tts life, that is,.
its blQoo/'- Revised Sta-n,diaTd Ver$'ion; Moffatt.
So this divine regulation was not merely a restriction on diet, sucb as a doctor",s advis.ing a
patient to a void al t ,o r fat. The Creator attadled
a highJy important'11W'TaZ pri,zcipk to blood. In
POlU"ing out all ilie blood that reasonably could be
so'm~

draiJled out, .oab and his descendants would


manifest their' regard for t he fa.ct that life was
from and depended upon the Creator. But let us
e...xamine this matter further.
The abO"ille-.<)uoted scripture applies to animal
hlood. Would the same prin.ciple .a .pply to human
b ood1 Yes, with even stronger for-ce. For God.
went on to say to Noah: "Besides that" 'l'o'U1' blood
ofyotltl'" souls shall ask back Anyone shedding
man's blood, by man will his own blood be $hed.,
for n God s imag,e he mad man." (Ge esis 9:5~ '6 )
Now, if animal hlood (representing anima] life)

was of sacI1ed significance to Go-d, obviously human blood had a

greater v

sacred significance of even

ue. Persons cornp y ing wth these divine

directions would not be shedding the hI'G od ,o f

(killing) humans, nor would they be ,e ating either


anim:aJ or h'UrnaIl blood.

JEHOV'At-t,",$ WI

However, 'DaS

ESSES AN

tht~

THe QUST'ION OF aLOOO

oommgnd to Noah only a

liw..ited or temporary re trictio,n ? Does it I"ave


a bearing on later genercctiORS, including ours?
any Bible scholars :recognize that God here set
out a regula jon tat applied. not :merely to N oab
and his immediate fanilly" but to all mankind from
that time on--ac ually all those Iiving since the
Flood are from Noah',s family. (Gen sis 10:32)
Theo]o ian and Ref ormationist :rohn caIvin. for
example, acknowledged about the prohibition on
blood -that 't aw had been given to the whole
world irrunedia tely af r
e ood. ~,~
d Gerhard
on Rad, professor at Heidelberg Unive~ ity, refers to Genesis 9 :3, 4. as "a ordinance for all
manklnd," because all mankind bas descended
froOm NoOah.~
Since the law on blood ,"vas linked with God's
pron.ouncelnent that cmphasiz d a high regard for
hUD.1aTI Hfe, we can appreciate the observatioO S of
Rabbi Benno Jacob:
"Thus the two prohlbitions elong together. They
are the most en'l ntary demands of humanity in
the literal s-cnsc of the word. _ . The pernlissioD
to eat :meat, but w i' out it blood and the pJ:ohlb:ltion aga nst shedding human blood indicate the
place of man within he world ot the Ihring . . .
In "wnmary: the
awn for the prohibitJon of blood
l ' oJ: a moral character. .. Later Judaism regarded
this passage as e tabUshlng fundamental. ethics tor
eV6'MJ human being.'7 (Italics adde .)40

In fact, later Jews drew from the early part of


Genesis seven "has-c la

,. for mankind, and th.is


comm.and to oah and his sons about blood was
one of t . em. Y , despite the fact that most na-

JIEiHOVAH'S WIliN ESS ES AN D Ttl

QIJ Es1'10~ Olr BlOOD

tions did not follow it, this was actually a law for
all rnankInd.- Acts 14:16; 17:30, 31.
L ater in his law given to the nation of Israel,
J e ho rab God prohibited murder, bearing out that
the mandate he had g"ven to
oah was still :in
er ect. (Exodus 20: 1.3) Correspondingly, God also,
forbade corurumin blood, saying~
.. As .for any man of the house o.f Israel or some

alle n

Ident who is resid ng as Ell

alien in their

Dlidst who eats' any SQrt of vWod. I shall ce..rtain1y

sa
y face again::> h e ouI that is eat i g the blood,
andi I 1111 inde(;d cut hi-m off f rom among his
people."- Leviticus 11'; 10.

The Israelites were allowed to use ani1na1. blood


only iill one way_ That was in offering jt up as a
sacrifice to God. acknowledging him as the LieGiver to whom they were i ndebted. He told them:
liThe ,s oul of the fiesh is ill the blood~ and j[ myself
have put it upon the altar for you to make ato e !lle'llt for your s ouls) because it is the bJood that

makes atonement by the soul [or life] in

jt~"

-Leviticus 17: 11.

How about the blood of atnima.ls killed for food,


not for saerifice? God told his worshipers that a
hunter who caught a wild beast or fowl "must in
that case pour its blood out and cover it with
dust. For the soul of every sort of flesh is its blood
by the soul in it~ Consequently I said to the sons
of Israel: "You must not eat the blood of any sort

of flesh, because the sou] of every sort of flesh is


its blood Anyone eating it will be cut off/"
17:13, 14; Deuteronomy J2 :23~25~
This pouring out of the blood was not simply .a

~Leviticus

J EHOVAH'S

wr

NESSES AND THE O'l.lES1l'ION OF BLOOD

rel-gious l'itua ; it actually was an extension of the


divine law given to Noah. \Vhen killing an animal,
a person should recognize that its life comes ironl
and belongs to God_ By not eating the bloc:xl" but
'pouring it out' on the altar or on the ground" the
Israelite was, in effect" returning the creature's
life to God.
or an Isra.eli tc to show disregard for life as
represented by the blood was viewed as a m :ost
serious 'Wrong. The person deliberately disrcgard.-ng hi law about blood was to be "cut off,'- executed. (Leviticus 7: 26. 27;
umbers 15:30, 31)
A measure of gui t resulted even from ating the
blood-eon taining flesh of an animal that died ,o f
i .elf or that was killed by a wild beas'L- Le".i.U cus
17: 1.5. 16; compare Leviticus 5: 3 j 11: 39.

Co,u ld God's law on bload be set asi.de in tiures


Q,I enliergencg?

The Bible answ-ers,


o. 'Tbere was no special
dispensation for imes of stress. \,e can s ee thi
from what occurred with some soldiers of I:s:rael in
the days of King Saul. Famished after a long
battle 1 they slaughtered sheep and cattle and "'fen
to eating along with the b lood." T hey were hungry
and were not deUberately eating blood, but ~n their
haste to eat the .meat they did not see to it that
the animals were properly bled Did the fact that
this seemed to be an "emergency" excuse their
course? On the contrary, t heir' God-appointed king
reoogn'zed their action as 's n u'ng against .Tehovah
by eating along with the blood/-l Samuel 14:
3 -35.

10

JEHOVAH"S, WlThlESS!ES AND THE Q'U~ION OF BlOOD

Does tlds p"oper aversion to blood apply to


mluWR blood also?
Yes~ And that is altogether understandable for
God's law prohibited consumIng nany sort of
blood/" uthe blood of .any sort of tJesh.~" (Leviticus
11: 10. 14) We can see how the Jiewish nation. regarded. th s: law by corut dering an ~nddent invollving some of the .Jews who bad followed and lIstened
to Jesus. On one' ,o ecasi,on he spoke figu1('atively
about 'drinking his blood.' for be knew that in
time his blood must be poured out ill a sacri cia]
de.ath and that lit wou]d result in life to those who,
tw faiili, accepted his sacrifice. (John 6 :.53-58)
Evidently not reali-zing that ,J,e sus was speak ng
symbolically, some ofllis JeWish disciples were
shocked over hlsords and left 'o ff folio ing him.
(John 16 : 60-66) Yes, the thought of taking in hu-

man blood was absolutely abhorrent to these


J"ewish worshlpeTs of God.
WDA'l!' ABOtrl" lDlUSTIANS'l'

The Mo....~ic law pointed to the coming and sacrificial death of the Messiah. Hence. after J e.sus
d ed, true worshipers. wer,c no longer ob]jged to
keep the Mosaic 1aw. (Romans 10: 4; 6 ,:4; Colossiis,..s 2: 13, 14) Dietary restrictions of the Law,
such as those against eating fat 01:" the .f iesb of
cerialin aniInals" weIle no il!onger ibu1Ldln.-Leviti ~

eus 7: 25; 11: 2-8.


So.. does the diuine prohibition .against blQon
apply to Christians P
'This matter came up for discussion in 49 C.Eo,
during a conference of the apostles and older men

JEHOVAH'S W ITN:SSSCS ANO 'tHE QUESTJON OF BLOOD

11

of J ernsalcm ho serve as a central body of elders


for all Christians. The conte ' ce was held in
response 0 a quest on about elre.-"UIIlC - sion. Thi
apostolic coundl decided thatnon-.Tews who accepted Christianity did not have to ge c-rcumcised. During tb disc
io
I esus' half brother
James brought to the c01!..lncil's attcnt-o ce tain
other essential things that he deemed important
to include in their decision, namely, tjtol wbstain
from things polluted by idols and fFom fornication and from what is strangled and [rom blood."
(Acts 15 :19-21) He .referred back to the writings
of Moses, w!hlch :reveal that even before the Law
"'as given.. God had disapproved of immoral sex
relations. idolatry and he eating of blood~ whi1c h
would inc ude eating the flesh of strangled animals containing blood.----'Genesis 9 :3, 4; 19:1-25;

34:3 ; 35:2 .
The decision of the council was sent by Ie tel'
to the Christian congregations. I t is nolo.,.' included
in the Bible as art of the inspired Scriptures that
are benefic -al nfor teaching. ~ . for s tting things
. aight.~~ (2 Timothy 3:16, 17) The decision was:
"The hoJy spirit and we Otffse1ves bave favored!
adding :no furthe burden to you. exoC.'ep these
necessary things. to keep abstaining from things
crificed to, idols and ir>om blood and from things
strangled and from forni<:-atiott. If you C8.l~efully
keep yourselves from these things, you will prosper .,"- Acts 15 :28 t 29~
YesJ even though Christians were not under the
Mosaic law, it was unecessaryn that
ey abstain
from blOod. Was that just the apostle pe'r sonal

12

JIlHOVAHS WITN~SeS AND 11-1 e Q UeSTION <Of lJlOO D

opinion? ot at a"R As they stated, that decision


was made in acoord wjth God's holy spirit.
- Concerning that Christian decree, Professor
\Valther ZiID1TIer]i, of the University of Gottingen~

GermallY, CQromented:
"The first .Tudeo-Chr rtan congr ,e gation in thedecision report@di on in Acts 15 m.ade a distinction
ben....cen the Law given to I s r ael through },.lOSes
o.nc1 he command given [through] Noah to a ll the
v ...orld_"-ZiiTcher B ibelk.ommcntar8.6

The command to -abstain from blood' was not


a mere dietary res L. iction but was a serious mora
rcqu-rem,e nt. as is seen by the fact that i t """as as
serious to Christians as 'ab tain~:ng rom idolatry
or fornica tjon .~
'I'

Y CUBI 'l'IAN

AND BLOOD

The Jerusalem council se t this clear-cut deci ~


siOl1 to the Christian congregations, with positive
results. We read in Acts chapter 16 ,c oncerning
Paul. n: d b "s assodates.; c~As they traveled on

through the cities hey would deliver to those


there for observance the decrees that had been
decided upon by the apostles and older lllen who
were in .rerusalem. Therefore, indeed, the oongregations continued. to be made .fi.l'ID .in the faith
an to inc ease ill number from day to day."'- A,c ts
16;4, 5.

Was the decision Y<ec6rded in.. Acts J.5 :28, 29


nunely a 'lempo1"ary Teq-uirement, Dot an obliga~
lion tlud continu.ed toO rest on Ch.ristians?
Some persons have held that the apostolic decree

was not a permanent obligation for Ch.ristians. B ut

JlHOVAH'S WliNSSE$ AND iHl; QUES'iIOM OF BLOOD

13

the book of Acts clearly indicates otherwise. It


sho\- s that, about ten yeru-s after the J erusa)em
council issued that decree. Christians c-ontinued to
comply with the "d cision ilia they shouLd keep
thernsclves from ,"vhat ]s sacrificed to idols as well

as from b ' ood and what' s strangled and from


fornication.'t I( AcUi 21 ;25) This shows that they

were awa:ve that thc requirement to absta<n f);'lorn


blood was not l:iiJniited to Gentile converts in one
area. nor applicable for just a b ief period.

But what was the situation In later centuries


when Ch istianity spread into distant places? Let

us considcr' the eVidcnc.c from the ccntur- es following the publishing of the decree recorded in Acts

15:28 29,.
7

Eusebius, a third century writer who is considered the father of Church histor-y/t relates
what ,oCClll"'rod in L~ on.s tnow in France) in the
year 177 C.E. Religious enenl ies falsely accused

Christians of eating infants. During tbe tortlll"e


and execution of SO.me Christia ns, a gid named
Bibilas responded to the false accusation, saying:
'Bow can we eat infants---we~ to whom it is ;not
1awfUl to eat the blood of beasts..' ''l"
S mUar false charges moved the early Latin
theologian Telwllian (c. 160'-230 C.E.) to point
out that though Romans commonly drank blood,
Christians certainly did noL He writes:
"Let your unna.tural ways blush before the CJ:uistians. ,\>Ve do not even bave the blood o! anIma.ls
at 00l:' meals, for these consjst ot ordinary food. _ . _
At the trials o:C Christians you offer them sausages
:filled with blood. You are conv1noo~ of course, that

14

JB-IO.yAH'S. WITNESSES ANDn-US Q1.JesTION

Or

BtOOD

the ery thing with which you try to make them


devJ<lte from t e rjght 'i ay
unlawful fo , tbem~
How is it that, ,-,hen ),'ou are co:nfident that they
win sJ u er at the blood o.f an anbnal. you believe
tbey will p:lllt eagerly afte.r

hU1naTI

blood ?"8

AlsQ>~

referring to, the decree of Acts l.5: 28~ 29,


he says: "The interdict upon 'blood~ we shall

UJlderstand to be [an int,e rdiict] much more upon


hUITIaD !blood.'"
.Minucius Felix, a Roman ]a\vyer who llved lmttl
about 250, C.E., makes the stnne point. l-vriting;
uSa :much dO' we shrink from bum.an b cod, that
we dO' nO't use the blood e ren of cata bJe animals
m our' food"'10.
The 'h istorical evidence is so abundant .a nd clear
thc.1.t Bishop John Kaye (1.783-1853) cou.ld state
cat..egoriical1y: 4'The Primitive Christians scrupulously complied with the decree pronoun oed by the
Apostles at Jerusalem, in abstaining from tbings
strang cd and from blood!' 11

Bu.t ,a re tire "primitive Christians' and Jeho,v a/!.'g Witnesses in modern times the only ones
to' 1uwe taken suM a view fnzsed OR the Bible?
Not at alL Corn:menting on Acts 15:29, Catholic
Biblical scholar GIuseppe Ricciotti (1890 1964),
refers to the incident at Lyons (described prev-otlSly) as evidence that early 'Christians could
not eat blooo.' Then he adds, "but even in succeed-

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, A N D THE Q

aTION OF BLOOD

1 ...

mg

centuries down to the Dillddle .Ages" we ,e ncounter unexpected echoes of this early 'abomination,

[of

blood] ~

due

unqucstionabb:

the

decre!. If~
For instanCCl' the Qu' ni e>..."t. Council held ill
'6 92 c.E. at; Constantinople stated: ''The: divine
Scripture commands: us to abstain flOOm blood~
ttom things strangled, and from. fornication. . . .
If anyone henceforth venture to eat -n any way
the blood of an animal. if he be a clergyman. let
him be depos-cd; if a la:Y'ID.an, let him ibe cut 'o ff. "'iu.
Simi1arly~ otto of Bam.berg (c:. 1060-11.39 C.E.)I
a noted prelate and evangelis , explained to con~
verts in P.omerania f"that the,y showd not eat any
thing unc.lean, or which died ot itself, or was
.s.trangled~ or sacrificed to idols, lOr the blood oC
aniInals.' Ji.-!I
Moving closer to our tim,e , Marlin Luther also.
r ,e cogn i7ed the lmplications of the dec ee of 9 C.E.
In protesting Catholic pra.c tices ,a nd belief's he as
inclined to, group the apostolic cOWlciJ! with la.ter
chw-eh councils whose decrees were not part of the

Bible. Still, Luther WJlote .regarding Acts 1.5: 28.


29;
''No'W iii we want to ha,v e a chureh that coniOl"n)S
to this council (as. ~is right, slnc!:! it :l!s the fi.rs1t nnd
to emost COI.lInd!, and was l'!I.cld [by the apostles
thexnselve-s). "....e nm.s'" teach and ins:1. t tiha1!: hence-

.forth no prJnce, Jor-d, 'bur<>'hc;>x, or peasant eat geese.


doe, stag, or pork cooked in blood ~ ... And burgb rs
and pc.asants filUm: abstain especially .!ro m :red saUM
sage and blood a usage. :1~

In the nineteenth century A.n.d:rew FLiller, viewed


as '~perha.ps the

IllOst

eminent and illfluential of

~6

JEHOVAHS. WITNESSES AND TH E Q U ESTlONi

Or

BlOOI!)

Baptist theologians, Y, wrote concerning the Genesis


9; 3, 4 prohib -tiOD ~>n blood:
"Thls", beJng forbidden tlo
oab. appears aloo to
have beel'l forbidden t.o aU m.anldnd; nor ought. thrs
prohibiition to be t:reated as. belonging 0 the ,c eremonies of the J ewllih dis.p ensatjon. It wru:; not oruy
c.nj oined before tl at cUsp~:rI!sation existed. but was
enfor ced upon the Gentile Christians by the decrees of the apostles, Acts ;';"''V. 20. . . . Blood Is the
Ute, and God SCC1l1.S t.o e1aim jt as sac.rcd to him
self. ,, ~.~

]..'!ight a Christ" an claim tba t the ,e x,e reise of


what some call "Christian liberty" should allow
him to ignore thi$ prohi.bition on blood? In his
book The History oj the Christian Ohurch, c ergyman William. Jones (1762 ~1.846) .replies:
"NotW ng can be more

than the praTt-fbit "on, Acts XV.2B. . 29. can tbose who plead their
'Christian liberty' in rega d to this matter point
us to any part of the Vio oro of God in which this;
prohJbltlon Is subsequently annulled? If not,. may
we be aUowed to ask:.. 'By what authority" eJ[cept
his Qwn. can. any 'Of the laws of God be repealed?' ,.
- Po 106.
,e-xpr~g.s.

The conclusion js plaiin: Under the guidance of


the h oly spirit the apostor c council decreed that
C hdstians who want God's approval must 'abstain

from b Dod: as God has required since the days


of Nooo. (Acts 15:28, 29; Genesis 9:3. 4) This
Scrip rural view was acrepted and followeu by t.he

ear y Christians, even when doing so\vould cost


them their lives. And do;\'n through the oenturies
this requirement has been recognized as 'necessary" io Ch isUatlS. Thus the determination of
, Jeh~-a1L~s Witne8S'es to awtain iTmn bZ:ood i8 based

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND THE QUESTION Of BLOOD

17

ot:t God/'s Word the Bible and is back'e d tlP by many


precedents in the hristQry of 01l.-rist-i.anitl1.
B L OOD AS l\OmDIOINE

Up to this point we have established that the


Bible requires the following: A human is not to
sustain his life with the blood of another creature.
(Genesis 9! 3, 4) When an animaFs life lS taken,
the blood representing that life i s to be ~poured
out,' given back to the Life-Giv er. (Leviticus 17:
3, 14) And as decreed iby the apostolic councl.
Christians. are to 'abstain from blood,' which ppliies to hUlllan blood as well as to anima] blood.

-Acts

5 :28, 29.

DQ these Bibli.cal stal.emen:ts.,. however,. apply


to t Ile t;l.ccept.rInce of transfused bloQd ,a s

life-

saving medical procedure?


So.me persons contend tha.t the Bib le forbids the
eating of blood as a food and that this is fundamentally , lfferent from accepting a blood transfusion, a :medical proceduro that: was not Imown
jn Bible times. Is that position valid?
There lS no denying that in Bible tOmes God's
la w had particular application to consuming blood
as food. Intravenous administration of blood was
not t.hen practiced. But, even though the Bible did
not directly discuss .m odern medi,c al techniques
involving blood, it did in fact antiCipate and cover
these in principle.
Note, fur example, the command ilia t Christians keep abstaj.ning . . . fi"Qm blood." (Acts
15: 29) Nothing is them stated ilia t would justify
making a distinction between taking blood into

18

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND HIE ClUES ION OF BlOOD

the mouth and taking it into the blood vessels.


And, realC I is. there in princip e any basic difference?
Doctors know that a person can be fed throug h
the Inouth or intra 'enous1y. Likewise. certain
medicines can be administered through varous
routes. Some antibiotics, for instance, can be taken
orally in tablet form. or injected in 0 a pcrson?s
muscles or circulatory system (intravenously) .
What if you bad take.n a certain antibiotic tablet
and, because of having a dangerous allergic reaction, were warned to abstain fro1:ll that drug in
the futur '? Vilould it he reasonable to consider tbu
medical warning to mean that you could not take
the drug in tablet form. but could safely inject it
into your bloodstream '? Hardly! The main point
woul d not be the route of aciminist1'ation, hut that
you should abstain from that antibiotic altogether.
Sim.Bady, the decree that Christians must 'abstain
from bJooo' clearly covers the taking of blood into
the body, whether through the mouth or directly
into the bloodstream.

How important is thi.s i.ss:ue .to Jell"ovcr.h's


Witnesses?
P,ersons \vho recognize their dependence on the
Crea tor and Life-Giver should .be determined to
obey hi commands," This is the firm position
that Jehovah's Witnesses take. They al--e fully

convinced that it
19ht to comply with God's
J.a;w commanding abstention from blood. In this
they are not following a personal whim or some
baseless fanatical view. It js out of obe.dience "to

JEHOVAH"S WI~E'SSS AND THE QUESTION OF BlOOD

19

the highest authority in the universe, the Creator


of lue, that they refuse to take blood into their
systems either by eating or by transfusion.
The issue of blood forJehovah's Witnesses,
therefore. involves the most fundamental principles on which they as Christians base th~ir lives~
Their relatio>n shiip with their Creator and God is
at stake. Furthermore, they wholeheartedly be~
reve the psalmist's. words: "The judicial decisions
o Jehovah are true; they ha.ve proved altogether
righteous. . . . In the keeping of them there is a

reward;' - Psalm 19:9 ,1~.


Some persons who look just at the short-te m
effect of decisions might doubt that obeying God's
aw about blood can be oonsidered 'rewarding.' But
.Jeho,rah's '''Vitnesses are sure that obeying the
diIlecUons from theiir Creator is for their lasting
good.
The early Christians felt the> same. History
shows that their obedience to God was sometimes
tested to the limit. :In the Roman Empire they
..vere put under pr@ssure to perform acts of idolatry
or to engage . n bnmoraIity. Their refusal to gi v ,e
in could mean being thrown into the Roman arena
to be torn apart by 'vicious animals. But those
Christians stuck to their faith; they obeyed God.
Think what that involved. For the early C~
Jal~e

Hans who ,,,ere parents, refusal to break God's


law might even bring death upon their children.
Yet we know from. history that t.hose Cbr.istians
did not fearfully and faithlessly turn til ir back
on God and the prinCiples by which they lived.

20

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSes AND THE QUSlil ON OF S l OOI)

"'1"Ihey believed Jesus' words: "I am the resurrection


and the life. He that exercises faith in me, even
though he dies~ will COlTIe to life!' (Joh n 11 :25)
Henre, despit.e the immediate cost, those Chris
tians obeyed the apostolic decree to abstain from
things sacrificed to idols Tom forn' cation and
from Wood. FaUhfulne-ss to God meant that much
to the.m..
T.oday it means that much to .Jchovabts Wit nesses also. They rightly fee] a mor.al obligation
to make decisions about worship for themselves
and for theIr c hilar-en. For that reason, Jehovah's
Witnesses are nGlt looking for anyone else, whether
a doctor, a hospjital adnllinistl'ator Dr .a judge, to
make these moral decisions fo them. They do not
want someone else to try "to should r their respon
'bili y to God" for in reality no other person can
do that. It is a personal responsibility of the Christian toward hiJ3 God and Life-Giver.
IS ItEFt1SAJ:. A FO:RM OF SUICIDE 1

In the face of massive blood. loss from inj'lllrY ~

disease or surgical complications~ blood trans:(usions have .often been .administered in an attempt
to preserve life. Hence, when persons hear that
someone :refuses -a blood transfusic~ they may
feel that he is in effect taldng his o wn life . .Is

that so?
Is it 4'~suicide" or exer-cismg oru!s -right to diei .,
to -refuse" blood transfusion?
Suicide is a seeking to take one's own life. It
is an attempt at seJ.t:-destruction. BUt anyone even

UHOVAH"S, 'WITNESSES AND THE QU!:STION OF BLOOD .

21

casually acquainted with the beliefs and practices


of Jeho ....ah's Witnesses can see that they are not
attempting self-destruction. Though they refuse
blood trallSfusions, they welcome alternative medical asista ceo An article in The American Burgoon.
correctly commented:
"In genera , refusing medical care is ot tanta~
mount to 'suicide! Jeh,cn,'a.n/s Witnesses ~eek m.G(I'ic~1
refu~e only one facet 0/ medical care.
Refusal of medical care or parts t.h@.reo;f 18 .not a
'crime' committed on oncscIt by an overt act ,0:{
tbe individual to. destroy. as is suicide.'~ <ItalIcs
added.)1T

attention but

Professor Ro,b erl Jl,I. Byrn pointed out in the Fordham Latu Review that 'rejecting lifesavl1g therapy
and attempted suicide are as diff,e rent in law as
apples and oranges. ' :IS And, addressmg a medical
conference; Dr. David Pent of Arizona obSe.rved:
"Jehovah's \Vitnesses feel that,. should they die'

'b<!eause 01 tbeil' re usal

receive a blood trans

fus ion, they arc dying Olf' their belie!s in mu<:'h tile
same way that the early religious ITlartyrs. did cenru;r,Les a.go. If this is pass! ve :roediical :sulcld~. there are
several pbysicians in tho audi~nco right now who
are smoking cigarettes, and that probably constitute just as patssi ve a suicide-'ILfIo

Whnt about the id~a that in refusing trangfu...


,ions Jeh()vah's 'Vitnesses are exercising a "right
,t o die"? The fact is that J"ehovahs Witnesses want
to stay alive. That is why they seck medical help.
But they cannot and will not violate their deepseated and Bible-based ' eligous convictions.
Courts of justice have often upheld the principle
that each individual bas a right to bodily integrity.

22

J EH OIlAH 'S WITN~s.sES AND TH E QUESTIOrr-q OF BLOOD

meaning that in the final analysis a person himself


is responsib e to Qecide what will be done toO his
body. Really, is that not how you would want it to
be if you , ere ill or hospitalized? Since it is yoOur
Hf,e . your health and your body, should you not
have the final voice about whether something wm
be done to you or not?
There are logical consequences of this inte igent
and moral vie\V. A booklet produced by the American Medical Asso<:iatioD e.xplains~ "The patient
must be' the final arbiter as to whether he will take
his chances with the treatment or .operation recomm.ended by the doctor or r.isl~ llving without
it. uch s the natural rigiht of the indivi.dual,
which the law recognize ." HA patient has the
right to withhold his consent to lifesaving treatment. Accordmgly, he can impos e such terms,
conditions. and liml ta lions as he may desire upon

his ,o onsent.,"l!.1)
Tbat . s true regarding blood transfusion just as
much as with any other "lifesaving treatment."
Dr.. jur. H . Narc of T ubingen, Gel'many; stated:
" T he righ and t e duty of the physician to

heal is imited by man's basic freedom of seUdetermination ~specting his own body. The

same is true for other medical intcrvention t hence


also for refusal of blood transfusion. "21
Understandably, some persons are shocked at
the thought of anyone's refusing blood if doing
so co ' d be dangerous or ev-en fatal_ Many feel that
e is
e foremost thing. that life is to be preserved at all costs~ True, preservation of human

JEHOVAH'S WIlNESSES AND THe QUESTION OF BlOOD

23

Ii fe is lOne of soc'ietys most important interests.


But should this mean that ,jpreserving life" comes
before any and ali pr.incjples?
In answer, Norman L. Cantor, Associate PrDfes-

sor at Rutgers La' School pointed out:


"Human dignity's enhanced by penni Ung the
individual to d~tcrn1in tor hiInscl1: what beliefs are
worth dying for. Through the ages, a multitude of

noble causes, relig'ous and secular, have been regarded as worthy of s~lfsaeTIfl.ec. Certainly. rn.ost
governments and societies, 'Our own included, do not
consider the sanctity 0 llt! to be the supreme
"alue:'~

Mr. Cantor gave as an example the fact that during wars some men willingly faced injury and

death' fighting for ''freedom~' or ~(democracy."


Did their countrymen view such sacrifices for the
sake of principle to be .m orally wt'ong? Oidtheir
na lions condemn this, COUrse as ignoble, since some
of tbose who died left behind widows or orphans
needing cal,'Ie?o you feel that lawyers or doctors
should have sought court orders to 'prevent these
men from making sacI'i fi ces in behalf of their
ideals? Hem,"e, iis it not obvious that willingnes.s to
accept dangers for the sake of principle is not
unique w jth J ehovah',s Witnesses and the early
Christi.ans? The fact is that such allegiance to
pl."inciple has been highly regarded by many per~
sons.
Also, it is worthy of reemphasis that., although
Jehovah's Witnesses do not accept blood transfusion~

they welcome aIternati re treatments that


may help to keep them alive. "WhY. then, should
anyo c e]se insist on and even force a certain

24

JfHO't{AH 'S WllNES-SES AND THt: QUESTION OF BlOOD

therapy tha.t totally violates a persont,s p ,r inciples


and profoundest religious beliefs?
Yet that has occurred. SOIne doctors or hospital
adrrdnistrators have even tUl-ned to the courts for
legal autho~iza tion to force blood on an individual.

Concerning those ;';'ho ha e fo llowed this course,


.Dr. D. N. Go]dstein wro,b;~ in The Wisconsin Medical J ou.rnal:
"Doctors fairing' thIs position have denied the
:sacn.fi~.s of aU th.e martyrs that bave glorified
history wi.th their supre:rne devotion to prjnc:ip:W
ev,e n a.t the expense of their own lives. For those
patients ...,,.,bo choOose certain death rather- than
violate a reJ1giow> scrupl e are of th.e swne stuff as
those who pald with their lives for faJ.th [n Goel or
who went to the stake rather thml acc@pt [forced)
baptism. . . - Ours :is the duty to .save liie but we
may weU question whether we do not also have a
duty to safeguard integrity and preserve the :lerov
gestures oOf personal authentlclty that continue to
ooc"UX in an increasingly regimented society_ . ..

No doctor should seek legal assistance to save Sf


b od}' by de-st oying a soul. The patient's life is hi:>

,own."%3

TJIB DOCTOR'S ROLE

We ba'\>'e Seen iliat t because of their strong


religious beliefs, Jehovah's Witnesses avoid both

flOOd that conta.ins blood and. medically administered blood. But how are ()thers affected by tlrls
stand, such as doctors who treat Witness patients?

Doctors are dedicated to saving or prolonging


life. That is the"r profession. Consequently, when.
a doctor schooled to view blood trallSfusion as
standard pra'c tice is treating a patient wbo i s:

JEHOVAHS WITNESSES AND THE QUESTION OF BLOOD

25

seriously ill or who has lost much blood, he lllay


find. it distreSSIng to learn that the patient refuses
bloo~. Whereas the patient's Bible-trained conscience-may not permit .a blood u-ansfusion, the
physician, too, has a conscence and follo'ws ethfcs
that are ,e xtremely important to him_
Sh.ould a ,d octor follow his own medical t.raining' and conuictions if he' feels tl"at a blood
transfusion, though refused by the pti.ent, is
needed to (lave that one"s Ute?

Ther,e ) nO' question that on suh cases ,a del"cate


si tuation exists. But each of us can ask: If I were
in a situa tiO!) where there was a confUict between
m.y conscience as a patient and the sincere conviction of an attending physician, what course
wowd I think ought to be foUowed? Consider the
remarks made by Dr. "Villiam P. Williamson at th
Fim:st National Congress on Medical. Ethics and

Prolessionalism:
'' 'Certainly . the physician's first thought must be
the weUare 01 the patIent. Since life is a gift of
the CrcatoiL to the indiridual~ the primary dcctsi&J
rightJully belongs to too patient!J' :because tbe pa~
ti@nt is the c ustodian 01 that gUt. ~ Tho pbysici':'IJ D
s .h ould tDea t the patient within the dictales of the
patient's religion. and not J01"ce his own religious
convictions upon the patient." (Italics added!.) U

There is another rea on, a legal one, why the


patient's consdence m t not be ovenidden. As
F ,o rdham Law Review.'
4. I do not nlean that the doctor :is bound by
th~ patient's choice to do something c:ontrn.ry to
the doctor's conscience.,
I do mean that the
Professor BYl"'ll

Wl'Otc in

26

J HOVAH'S WITNESSES AND THiE QU5STION Of BLOOD

patien is not bound by t ' e doctor's conscience to


do something con rar-y to the patient's choice7 and
conseq ently the doctor may Iba \lC the right and
choice to do nothing. The law oj informed OO'1't8e'ntwould be rendered meau ingless if patient choice

wer,e s'Iw.servient to

con8~ientious

medical jltdg-

ment.-" (Italics added.) :::1


The possibility exists of a physician in this
situation 'doing nothing: that is, withdrawing

from the case; but :is that the only alternative?


In his article "Emergency Surgical Procedures in
Adult Jehovah"s Witnesses." Dr. Robert D. OMaley commented: "The patient's refusal to aocept
bl,o od transfusion shou1d not be us d as an excuse
for abandonment by tb,e mecrcal profession.'7:l
What, then. could a doctor do? Dr. J. K. Holcomb stated in a -medical journal editorla :
"No doubt, we as pl1ysJ:cta.ns, .fecI .frustrated,
e en angered, when an obstinate patient refuses t
accept what we would 'c onsidel' the prelerred regJmen of therapy~ But, should we ho.n estly .feel this
\vay ","'hen the patient cites a religious be1ief as the
basis for his reluctance to accep' specific treat
Dlent? I f we are honest with oursel VCS we will
admit that we settle tor something less than :Ideal
treatment with Dlany pa.tients In our day-to-day
practice. . . . It we can do thIs with respect to our
medical con'lorictions, shouldn't we likewise be willing
to de the best we can when a pati nt's convictions.
particularly relJg10us ones, prevent eur offering
what we weuld consider the desired .f erm 01 therapy.
Usually, patients ha,,1ng reUglotls reasons :for not
accepting blood transfusIons, etc. are aware of the
.medical risks invol ' ed .in their decision, but are
willing to accept those risks and ask only that we
do our b st:....'1
j

JEliOVAH.'S WITNESSES AND THe QUESTION Of BLOOO

21

There is another consideration as to the mDral


aspect of the matter. John J~ Paris, Assistant
Professor of Social Ethics, pDinted out: 'There
is great co,n sensus in oth the medical. and moral
communitic.s that an individual has no mDral obligatiDn to. undergo <extraordin ary' medical treatment" And if the patient has no moral obligatiDn
to undergo 'c.x :traordinary treatment-common
tho.ugh :it might be in regular practice--neither
has the physician any mo aJ. obligatio.n to. rovide
it; nor the judge to order i t. '~8 For Jehovah's W-tn
s,. who, direct their lives by the tbIe, blDod
transfusions certainly are "extraordinary" treat..
went. In fact} they are mor-ally forbidden.
COOPERATION BET

PA'i"IENT AND DOCTOR

All persons concerned with this matter can rest


assured that JehDvah's Witnesses are not fanatics
who. oppose medical care. Recall that Luke, who.
wrote the B"bl
,ccoun .of the decr,e e against
blood, was himself a phy; ~cian~ (Coloss.i:ms 4:14)
Thus, when .lehovahs Witn s
are m or have
an accident, they do not look for some mJraculous
U{aith healing" cure. Rather, they eel:: medical
help. In this they do nDt try to dictate to
ctOl'S
Dn how to., practice medicine or even on the management of their own particular problem. The one
thing that they consistently ask frDm doctors is
that blood not be used.
The Witnesses hay a high regard fo,r the train..
ing and abilities 0 persons. in the medical field.
T ey sincerely appr:ec ate doctors who use their

28

JEHOVAWS WITNESSES AND THE QUlESlilON 01" BLOOD

skill t'O, treat a patient.. but doing so in accord with


the pat'ent s 'con~ientious beliefs. W i tnesses recognize that it takes cOU!r8.g,e for a doctor to operate
without beiing free to U b ood. Also, it takes a
measure of courage to go contrary to the views of
one's medical contempor.aries and agree to practice medicine under conditions that may be viewed
as medically less than op bnum.
aturally, .Jehovah's Witnesses al'e aware that
some surgical procedures may involve so much
blood loss that a doctor may honest y elieve they
cannot be undertaken on the terms the Witnesses
present. Most surgery, ho,w ever, 'c an be perfonoed
without blood. True, doctors may feel that by not
using Mood the operation is made more dangerous.
But the Witnesses are wiJUng to face such increased risks with the courageous help of skiHed

doctors.
During a panel discussion at the Univer ity of
P, ennsylvani~ _ r. William. T. Fitz rated an interesting case. It involved a thirty-four-year-old
patientwbo had. hIed severely :from a tumor of the
colon. The man, one of Jehovah's Witnesses.. told
the doctors that he "would gladly undergo any
surgical procedure as long as he would n.ot be
given blood." The doctors agr~ed to operate, promising that blood would not be administered. DUring
and after the operation blood loss was so great
that the patient's hemog obin, which is normally
14 or 15 gramSt fell to 2.4 grams. But he did not
die. Rathel\ his condition stabilized and then his
blood count climbed. Commenting on the doctors

JEHOVAH'S WI NESSES AND THE QUESTION Off BlOOD

21

promise not to administer blood:; Dr. Francis


\Vood, Cha'rman or the Department of Medicine,
said: ""I think you ht\d a perlect right to promise.
The man was go -ng to die . you did not operate.
He had some chance of getting well as a result of
the operation without blood tran..c;fusion; thereforeJ
think you were perfectly jllstified. in giving him
the chance on his own 1:enTIS/''::s
BELm

G DocrORS 0

LJ:ABJLIT'Y

Doctors are in a difficult position in treating


any serious case, ior failure to use all available
prlocedures may invo]ve theITI in a ll1a1practice
suit. Jehovah's Witnesses however. al~ will ng to
bear the .responsibility for their .r efusal to accept
blood tra,nsfusion. They will sign lega] waivers that
j,

relieve the medical staff and hospritaJ ,o f any concern about su:its~ iin the event that .harnl be art-rib-uted to theit" opel--a.ting without blood.
The American Medical Association has recom
mended a fo m entitled "Refusal to Per-mit Blood
Transfusion" for patients who will not accept blood
because .of reliigious beliefs. It veads: '~I (We) request that no blood or blood del'ivatives be ad~
ministered to _________ .__.__.__ during this hospitaliza~
tion, notwi fustanding that such treatment may be
deemed :Ilecessary in the opinion of the attending
physkcjan or his assistants to preserve life or promote recoVery. I (We) release the atiendiin . physician~ his assistants, the hospital and its personnel
from any responsibility whatever for any untoward
results due to my (our) refusal to permit the use
of b cod or its derivatives.J>3>O' This document is to

.30

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND THE QUEsTION OF 81.000

00 dated and s'iignoo by the patient and by witn~sses present. A close relati vc such a
a mate or
parent (in the case of a child) could sign the f onn

too.
The wi ingness of Jehovah's \Vtnesses to accept
personal responsibility regarding their stand on
blood is further shown by the fact that most of
them carry a signed card requesting ''No Blood
Transfusion!" This document acknowledges that
the signee realizes and accepts the implications of
refusing blood. Thus, even if hC' should be unconscious when brought to a doctor or hospital,
th:s signed statement mal\:es clear his firm posi-

tion.
Aligllt a doctor Of' hospital be Ileld liable if

blood is IWt given?


An article .n. the University oj San Francisco
Law Review considered this point. It explained

that Judge Wan-en Burger, who became Chief


.Justice o.f t e United States Supreme Court, said
that a lllalpractice Pl'Ioceeding "would appear unsupported" in an 'instance where a waiver had
been signed. The article continued:
''Th~

-possibility o.f a cri:m.inaJ charge ls even mor>E!


I"'CTIlote. One c!'ommentator who. surveyed the lit Fa
ture repo:rted, "1 have not been able
find any
au horUy :tor the statement.
at th
physician
would incur . . . crinrlnal . . . Habl.Iity by his .fa lure
to force a transIu sJon on an unwilling pa tlen t.' The
risk eems mol' the product of a 1ertlle legal! IDind
tban a realistic pOBsibillty.";u

Regarding the situa-ron n England, E'T.nergenties in M ed'ical Practice said: "If the position has

JEHOVAH'S WI1fN:ESS.ES AND THE Q 'U I:5TION OF BLOOD

31

been made clear to the patient and he dies Ulltransfused no ac tion ~n be taken against the
doctor for no patient is; ,o hliged to prese e his.

life by the use ,o f .special (lr extraordinary m.ea


sures.?>~

A doctolr- contemplating surgery ,o n a pat-e t


wHl naturally want to explain clear'ly what are the

possible r sks of r fusmg blood. But once he has


do , e thl thQ doctor need feel no moral obligation
to press. the matter further. CertainlY it would be
unethical to try to 'wear down" or frighten .into
submission a patient who hasl resolutely decided
against accepting blood.
Since .TehGvab~s Witnesses willingly accept respons~bility fo their dec-sion, doct,o,r s are legally
and in fa.ct ,m orally relieved of any obligation to
insist on blood And this is ho many e thical and
since:ve physlc~ans prefer it to be. ~'One cannot
warn too Ul:"g@ntly against a weakening of the human right of se]f..(}etenm.nation, including tha't of
the patient," wrote surgeon G_ Haenisch of Ham-

burg. Germany. "A gran 0; authority for the physician to unde~e a treatment that he deems
right though it be against. the will of the patient
is to be uncomprom!sD:ngly rejected. " - Deut8Che
Medizii'!fsche Wochensch,rift.lI<:!In view of this human right, legal and medical
publications in some lands have repeatedly warned
that adtninisi:ering .a tt-a.ns:fusion against a pa-

tlenrt's wishes could ttl ke a. doctor (,o r the hospital staff) a


to assault and battery charges
or a justified malprac -ce suit.

32

JEHOVAH'S WliNESSiES AND THe QUESTION OF ,IHOOD

What .flOO:ut administering bl-nod without telling the paUcnt, perhop's when he is u.n,c onscious?
Many smoere physicians feel that in some situati!ons~ such as with terminal cancer, it is a
kindness not to give a patient fun lnformation
about his ,c ondition. wnile there may be v,aryinO'

opinions about the prop iety of withholding details


of a , patient's condItion, that is quite different from
a doctor's deliberately a.dnlinistering a ll"ea1tment

that he knows the patient has forbidden. ""'riting


In the New York State Journal of Medkine~
Dr. Bernard! Garner and his associates stressed

this point. They acknowledged that sometimes a ,


doctor has let a Witness patient become unconscious and then given him blood, perhaps, thinking ~Wh.at he doesn't know won't hm't him,' But
they co eluded emphatically: "'Althougb the moti.ve might be altruistic, tbis would be most distasteful ,e thically.";:!:
Why this is so was made clear by Marcus L.
Plante, Professor of Law, Univer; ity of M'chigan
Law School. He wrot'e that ~the physician has a
fiduciary re1ationshlp [one founded on trust) to

his patient and owes an absolute obligation never


tQ mislead the pa:..tient by words or silence as to'
the nature and character of the medical procedure

he proposes to undertake. "so.


Furthermo'r e, in some localities a doctor's promis:i.Qg not to give blood and then underhandedly
doing so is legally wrong. For exam.ple, in West
Germany's M ed'wal Tribune it was pointed out
that 'nothing is changed when the patient be-

JIE HOVAH"S WUTNESSES AND THE QtlESTION OF BLOOD

83

COmes unconscious." This is so because "refl ls:a1 t ,o


accept a blood transfusion. OnCe expressly 8ta ted
by a competent patien4 :is also valid in the event

!he becomes unconscious."ZIli Underscor,' ng the matter more ernpha.ticallY7 the Supreme Court of
Kansas declared:
4~

. . Each ITIlan is considered to be Inaster of hlis

own body, and he may if he be of .sound mind, expressly probi'bi t the pcr.fo rna ce of lite-,s aving sur.
gery, ,o r other filed'cal treatment. A doctor might

well belJeve that an


Dlent is desirable or

Opel'a tion or form 01 treat~


n~ssary but the law ooefJ not

permit him to subs ilute his o,o;'n j udronent for that


of the patient by any form 01 artifi!;e or oocep,t liion/I
(Italics added. ) !U

CO equently, dec,e ptively amuinistering a b ood


transfusion t .o one of Jehovah's Witnesses js
against the professional ethics of mm:aJ! physicia.ns.
It ,c ould make .a doctor liable le,g ally.
BESPEC'I'1NG PARRN'J'AL ItESPONSmIJ:.ITY

Liklely the ,a spect of this matte'r that is: most


highly charged wi til emotion involves the treating
of a chUd. All tOf us veal:ize that children need care

and protection. God-fearing parents particularly


appreciate Uris. They deeply love thek chil<iren
and keenJJ.y feel their Q.od given responsibility to

care f01" them and make decisions for theil.' asting


wei are.- Ep,h esians 6 ,:1-4.
Society. too', recogniz'e s parental re~onsi.bility.
acknmvledging that parents are the ones prlmari1y
authorized to provide for and decide for their
chndren.. Logically, religious beliefs in the family

34

.JEHOVAH'S WITNI1SSeS AND THE QUESTION OF a 001)

hav,e a bearing on t.bis. Children are certainly


beneti:ted if their parents;" religion stresses the need
to care .for them.. That is so with Jehovahs Witnesses.. who in no vay want to neglect their children. They .recognize it as their God-given obligation to provide food, clothing, shelter and health
ca:re for them.~ Moreover, a genumH' apprciatiion
of the need to provide for one~s children also re-

quWes incWcatiI\g in them morality and regard


for ~ hat is right. As has been mentioned, "the
early Christians were exemplary in this; the parents both taught their children and personally
lived up to, the moral teachings they enunciated.

His.t ory relates that whole :fami1ies sotnet:im.es


were exposed to death .in Roman arenas because
the Pa.re:D.'lts would not violate their conscieJ1tious
beJiefs.

We are all aware that the lack of parental. "teaching and moral example has contributed to the
fact that many youths today halore no basic values;
they think nothing of endangerin... their health
and! life~ as wen as the lives of others., in an unresu'ai'ned seal'Icb for thrills. Is it not much better
for youngsters to have parents who promotemorality andresp~ct for high principles? Parents: who
are J ,e hovah's Wjtnesses show great lov for their
children as well as their God by using the Bible
to aid their children to become moral persons.
'l'hus when these children ,a re old enough to know
what the Bible says abourt b ood, they themselves
SIJ.lpport their parents'> decision. to abstain {rom
J

bJood'- Acts 15;29.

Jf:ROV.t,H'S WITNESSES AND THE QIJIEs'JION 01" 8LOO!)

35

Need a doctor feel that he ought to administer


blood to a child in spite of the resolute wishes of
the parents and perhaps even of the child Use"?
Frankly, in view of the well-recognIzed right of

parental responsibility, 'the moral, principled and


consistent position for a doctor is to recogn~ the
responsIbility of loving, concerned arents t ,o make
decisions for their minor children.
In tllls regard, Dr. A. D. Kelly, Secretary of the
Canadian . ewe-a] Assoda tiOR, ,,-,-rotc that "'par:ents
of minors and the next of .kin of unconscious acnt possess the right to interpret the will of the
patient. and that \,'ve should accept and :respect their
wishes. . . I do not adm" , e the p 'oceedings of a
moot court assembled at 2: 00 a.m. to :remove a
child from his parent's custody.'~aa
Some persons in t.he medical and legal profesio
bave recognized that a competent odult has
the right to ~fuse a blood transfusion. Burt they
bave h.eld that if parents refuse permission for
their- child, a transfusion should be forced by coU!I"t
order. This posit-o;l' owever, lacks fundamental
cons"ste cy and har.m.ony. as pointed out in the
journal. Forens" c Science:
are wJll
InC to assign a diflerent religion 0 the children thaD
that of their parent J wh n statistics show that the
oven"'helming m.ajorl.t y o.f children are reared and
indeed 1011ov.. the same religious denomination as
their parents? Would thl also not be as fil.uch an
infringeDlent of relJglous rights of the chlldreD by
the courts as those rights which the court is trying
to protect .for the adults under the First Amend-m.ent Lot the Constitut on] by denying !the transfusion over the adult's objections? Are the courts
"Are we then to assume that the cour

36

JEHOVAH'S, WI'TJN ESiS.es AN.D TH~ QUesTION 0

BlOOI)

not as!>igning in c;ssence a religion to the cJrtldren


i f the .

de~y tra:ru:ifusjons on rellglous grounds for


adults and per.mlit thC!lU for the chndnm ot the s,aJll(!
adul ?"3-:9

There is often ano1:her gross moral inconsistency


in fordng a blood transfusion on a Child whose
parents, have asked that other medical therapies
be uscd_ At some hospitals doctors in one room
may be forcing at transfusion on an infant. Yet in
a nearby reom. other doctors; may be perfo,r ming
legal. abortions, ,e nding lives only a fiew months
younger tha.n the child on w fi.mn blood ]s forced
'tOo save a life.' Thlshas: led thinking persons to
wondel~ II 'Preserving lLif;e ' is always the real issue
behind! forced transfusjons~

Consider the imp]ica lions of sta. te-autborized


medical treatment that fon:iibJy takes a,way the
right

of

parental

responsibility.

:In

Scotland t

A. D. ,F an", a college lecturer on blood transfusion


technil.}ues~ wrote with. regard to forcing transfusions, on adults and chHdren;
"'The over.ruling in respect ot. a minority

~]igious

eliet !s ,e xtended to OiVerru]iing the whole prinCiple


oj' an adult being allowed t.o accept ot" reject a
particular form ot medical treannent. . . 'The State
is g,radlilllly taking over the function of lmaking
dec:i.s";a
for tb.e individual. I t is in tWs way that
~ countries ,c e.ase to be 1'ree and becOJn~ totali
tarian. It was indie@d by tb.e takingoOver ot the
Grrman children into 1lhe roUer Youth movement
tihat freedom and privacy "",ere finally suPP1LleSSe.d
in Nazi GerfiJany. This is not mere tanc1ful speculation. Freedo:m. is a precious and co.rnparaUve y
rart! possession. to be ,jealously guard! d in those
cmm.tries where It e2dsts~ Anyone le n.crQ3.clunent 011
Individual liberty is (l,n e too rnany... n

JEHOVAH'S WllrNESSES AND THE QUESTIOIl-oll Of BLOOD

37

Additionally, even if a doctor sincerely belieVies


That a ehild needs a blood transfusion, doe that
mean that no other therapy wm doiF' Or does t
mean instead that he thinks that a tran.sfusioI1lJ
IClIffe :'S mOTe likelihood of sucCe'ss than alternative
therapies? In. th connectIon a council of JfUdges
in the United States of America wrote in "Gill es
to the Judge in Medical Orders Afieet:ing Children":
{lIf there is a cMice of

example, the doctor recomInends a procedure which


hatS an BOper cent chance of success but which the
parents disapprove, and the parents have no objection to a procedure which has oruy a 40 per
cent chance of success--the doctor must ta..ke the
medically riskier but parentally unobjectionab e
course.' on
These judges also said that umedical knowledge
is not sufflciiently advanced to enable a phys clan
to predict with reason.able' certainty lthat his pa.
tient will Hve or die or wID suffer a permanent
physical inlpairment or defonnlity." Is there not
much truth in that! Do not medical authorities
emphaE(ze that at best they can say o.n1y what
8eem.8 Z'ikeJ-y to :ha-ppent Accordingly, many I:Iespected physicians and surgeons have cooperated
with Jehovah's Wj'tnes~s,. pI'Iovidlng fine medkal
proccdur~if,

tveatment for YOlmg ,a nd old while respecting their


Bible-based convictions about

blood~

TBEt\TING THE -WhOLE MAN"'

Persons in the medical field are appreciating


more and more that it is important to deal with

38

JEHQVAH'S WITH~Es AND THE QUESno ..... OF BLOOD

a patient as a

man." What needs beata thyroid or a liver. but at whole

'~whole

ment is not just


person~ a human with feelings and beliefs that
actually lna:\or influen ce his response to t r eatment.
In a T:ea::aa Medicine editorial. Dr. Grant F. Begley
wrote that ~ when I treat an illness: that affects
the body. mIndl' and spirit of the person in my
care, it is "\\'hat he believes that is important. His
belief s, not mine, are the ones that cause h.im to
:f1 I fear, doubt, and guilt. If my pat' nt does n ot
believe m blood tr.a.nsfus:i,ODS, what I think: about
them does not ro.atter.n.:&
Treating the u w holeman'1 is both hunmne and
practical in view of the tragic results that can
come from dOlm otherwis e. ('The perceptive physician,n urged D ~ Melvi A. Casberg On The J~

naZ oj tn-a American Medical Association.. ~'must


be atwm-e of these sep.arate but mt.er.re1ated facets
of the body. the mind, and the spirit, and a.ppreciate tbat healing the bo S -n the (ace of a bromen
mind. or spirit is but a partial victory, or even an
ultimate defeat. "..a
A doctor thus ,i s following the course of wisdom
and treating the uwhole man~' when he shoWS
respect for h -s patient"s I'ellgious convictions as
to
e use of blood.
IS THEm STAND 'MEDI,C UJZ 'UNREASONAJU.E'

Even though Jeho,v ah's Witnesses' basic objec'"


tion to blood transfusions .is for religious reasons,
many persons view thls stand as medica By un-

.reasona e. But is it? Since the Witnesses' position


OD blood relates to a medical issue, there is benefit

JEHOVAH'S WLTNESSiES A~Do THE qUESTION OF BLOOD

,3 9

in briefly examining the medical implications of


refusing blood.
In just the United States, Japan and F.rn.noo,
seme 1.J) million units (500 ce each) of blood m-e

transfused annually. It is appr opriate to ask: Is


all this bl.ood given because it is needed. to save

life?

The cone usion reached by 800 European doctors


co,nveneOJ in Paris was that "blood is too often considered as a. 'n~i!racle tonic' given the patient
whether he needs it or not." These doctnl's particularly disapprovod of single-unit transfusions"
which they said are "useless 99 times out of 100."4,4;
A study in the United States sugg,e sted that 72 percent of the transfusions, administered in some
places are 'Unnecessary or questiollable/~s
Dr. Rune E1.iasson of Stockholm. Sweden t ventured the opinion ~that many physicians. perhaps
misled by the power of the word over the mind,
have allowed themselves to he- too easily blinded
by the halo they themselves have placed around.
the transfusion of blood so that the advantages
and disadvantages of this form of treatment canot be seen in their proper perspective.''''J:1l
'Vhether or not you agree with the religious
reasons why ,J ehovah's W itnesses do not accept
blood transfusions" the 'a.dvantages and disadv,a ntages of thls form of treatment" merit consideration. This is especially so since some judges discussing transfusions have .r ecommended that a
patient~s wish . as to alternative treatment should
be followed if there lis a distinct risk associated
with the standard treatment.
j

40

.JEHOVAH'S WITNeSSteS AND I'll

QUlf5TIONI Of BLOOD

BLOOD-VOMFLEX AND UNIQUE

Whereas some pers~ns may be 'q uick to call the


r ,e jection of blood ~t'S'Uicidal,'" a fair approach to

the matter r ,c qmrcs acknowledg-ng the fact that


there are uncertainties and e1;l\en dangers associated with blood transfusion.
Doctors know that blood is extreme y ,c omplex.
This is manifested even in just the matter of blood
types. Reference works state that there are some
fifteen to nlneteen lrnOllll'll blood group systems.
Regarding ,o nly one of these, the Rh blood group
systern t a recent book about blood said that ('at
the present time nearly three hundred different
Rh types may thooret1ca1ly be recogpjjsed.,""~
Another facet of the complexity and uniqueness
of each one's blood is the variety of ant bodies, in
it. At a me ting of scientists in Zurich, Switz'e rland, a group, of English crinlinologists pointed OUI
that the antibodies .are so diverse that the blood

of each person might be said. to be specific' Wld


tmique. ,S ci,e ntists hope to be able to "'reconstruct
from a ]bloodstain The pers on ali ty .ilnage of 'e very
person who eaves beh'nd a trace of blood.t'4IS
The fa,c t that blood is an extremely complex

tissue that differs from person to person has a


significant bearing on blood transfusion.. This, is a
point Dr. Herbert Silver, from the Blood Bank and
Immunohe:matology Division of the Hartford
0( C{)nnecticnt) Hospital, recently rna e. He wrote
that, considering Qnly those blood factors for
which tests can be perfonned, ''there is a less than
1 in 100,.000 chance of giving a person blood exactly like his ,o vvn."d

41
Consequently, whether having religious objections to blood transfusions .o r not, many a person
might ecllne blood simply because it is essentia]ly
an organ transplant tha.t at best is orn!y partially
compa tible with his own blood.
EHO'VA.H"S, WlilN8SSf'S AND THE QUESTION C

BLOOD

BLooD'll'RANSFUSIO S
-BOW ~CH ACTUAL DAl'ifGJ3RY

Doctors know that with any medical preparation


there is a measure of :risk, e\'~en with medicines as
common as aspirin and penicillin. Accordingly, it
might well be expected that treatment with ,a substance as comp ex: as human blood involves some
danger. But just how much danger? And what
bearing might this have on a physician s view of
the stand taken by Jiehovah's Witnesses?
A frank apprai .ai of the
proves tlUd blood
transf-usion m'11$t lwnesU;;y be r ,egaTded la s a procedu,re involving conside-rable danger and even (l8
potenti'aUy lethal. ~o
nr. C. Ropa..rtZ" D irector of the Central Department 0 Transf-us[ons :in Rauen, Francel1 commented that .~a. hoWe of blood is a bomb}~ Since
the dc:mg,e rous results may not appear until som'e
time has pa.ssed~ be added, ufurt.he:nno.re. it may
also be a time bomb for the patient."tn. A United
States 'G overnment publication carded an article
on the dangers of blood and said that
7

"acts

.. . . donatlng blood can be ,e oulpared to sending


a loaded gun t:o an iIlllsuspectlng or unprepared
person. . Like the loaded gun,. there Is a at'ety
lever or button governing blood transtusions. But~
how :many persons have died .from gun shot wOWlds
a the result of believing-the 1ever was on 'sa.!e' ?"G:1II

42

JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES AND 11i1; QUESTION OF BLOOD

Can knowledgeable doctors dismiss the stated


dangers as being exaggermums?
Hardly, for the reality of the dang rs j often
brought home to ph:ysicians. uNo biologic produ(..t," \"'l"Ote Winfield S. Miller in Medical Economics.. "has a greater potential for ~atal mistakes
in medical practice than blood. 'lore than one
doctor has learned to hi SOJ'TOW that every bottle
cf blood in the blood banks is a potential bottle of
nitroglycer" . UriS
The patient or his fam.ily may not realize the
dangers urrti i is too late. Stanford University's
Dr. . Garrott Allen, a leading expert on the blood
problem, estimated that blood transfusions kill at
, east 3,500 Am.ericans each year and jnjure an
other 50,000. r;.-. But there is strong reason to believe that thisactuaijy' an underestiimatiion. For
instance the Sout1tern~ Medical J ourn<U recently
suggested that the estimate that "between 3,000
and 30,000 deaths attributable to transfusions" is
probably a conservati.ve estimate. r;1S And bear in
mind that these are figures for just one country,
to say notrung of the 'est a the world.
At a meeting of the American Conege of Surgeons. Dr. Robert J. Baker reported that the ~dan
ger of adverse eff~ from blood is far greater
than previously believed with one out of 20 patients developing a reaction.~ How many persons
realiz this? Showing why "'that report should
conceTn us aJJ, Dr. Charles E* Hugg"ns, associate
dir ctor of a large blood bank, added: "The report
is frightening but reJlJistic becaQse the same pro~
lems are facing every institution [throUghout]
the world. "~~

JEHOVAl-!'S WITNESSES AND THe QlIfSitO.... OF alOOO

43

Is :relief in sight? Many persons~ perhaps even


some iu the medical profession, may feel that
sc' ence has been making :real headway in overcoming the dangers of blood transfusion. But, as
was stated in a. I'eccnt issue 'o f the journal Surgery;
"major new problems related to mass've transfus: on have been proposed, problems hardly or no
at all consi eredas recently as five years ago, yet
potentially overshado vtng almost all the p robl'ems
that haunted the consciousn
Qf the blood bankers, clinicia s'" and investigators for the first 40
years of cJjnical blood banking."C'01
WHAT ARE THli!: DANGERS?

Without belaboring the tact that dangers do


exist, w.e can briefly ,e xamine what some of these
are. Though many doctors: are acqua nted with
the following information1 it may help other persons to appreciate that, ~en though the stand
taken by Jehovah's Witnesses is for religious rea ..
OIlS, it has merit medically_
The textbook Hematology CQntains thjs table:l!!10
y ...... til 1rcmsfC

Mril.
L .,la:Icy.

on R.ad,QM

Cal'dio<
clJI~bodi.1.

Platelet a ... t.1bodi.s


,
Pyro9o-Ill.
AII-str:
He o!lylic
(in!;Ompc;rlibTe I't'aruhaioo)

lfraDlminio'll of

do,.,.!;".

SeAim "epcllilil.
Mo .....iicr

Syph1lts
Cytomtlgalmrlls lnfccfi:ol'l
Oro"" bacterial eo JCtminaliol!l

Ok'~le

~rtood

intoxiccrliOIl
Pota"ium ;"lo)[iOllJ10n
AbftOlmol bl eding
I nClOmpollbfe Iran d.,lio
Maui'l'O' troru. wsion
ot.en$ilizalloo.
Tt~nd sio
helllOli
odl
Mi$.eenal'l~ c
nl'OlllbopP11 cbj'H.s
Afr emballsm
I";.action of fo:r.igll .. al_ioJ

44

JEHOVAH'S WITNesSES ANO THI; QU!E'SliION Of BlOOD

These numerous

of transfusion reactions
are indeed serious, .for they can cause death . .Let
types

us consider some 'o f tbm.


The table p,r esents first some of the ~imru.ediate"
reactions. A febrile or fever-producing react on
can usuallylbe treated successfully. However. as
Professor

Medicine .lames W. Linman

reports~

"severe febrile l'eaCtiOl1S occur and may be sufficiently stres w to be !fe-threatening in certain
acutely ill pa:Uents."a:a l'dismatched blood brings on
a hemolytic reaction, .involviing rapid destruction
of ved bl,oodi cells. which can result in kidney allure, shock and death. Hemolytic reactions are
especially dangerous t~ patients under anesthes:ia.,
for the SYD1ptC:Hns may not be noticed until it is
too late/i l"
flTransmi sion ot disease" is also listed runong
possible reactions.. Is there any substantial danger
from this quarter?
Hepatitis B (serum. hepatitis) is a particularly
bazardous complic-ation of blood tra.nsfu'sions. The
blood of a donor~ without its Ibe'ng suspected., may
contain the hepatitis Virus that can damage the
healt.h of a person receiving the blood, or even kill
him. The more trans usions someone gets, th
greate his likelihbod is of contracting serwuhepatitis. Yet it does not take a great deal. of blood.
Less than a drop will do;' you can contta'c t the
disease fr~m as litUe as one millionth of a milliliter of infected b.!.ood.eo
How likeJy is it that you might contract
hepatitis fr-orn. a blood transfusion? To some extent that depends on where you n\~., for' post-

JEHOVAH'S Wil1iN.ESSES AND' THIE QIi.Il ESTIOt-l Of BLOOD

45

transfusion hepatitis is morc' common in lands


where some of the blood comes from paid .tdonors,
peop;l.e whQ sell their blood.
An estimate tha.t often appears in m 'e dical journals j that ,o ne percent, or on person out 0 . one
hundred. contracts hepa:ti tis following a transfusion.Q However, the evidence indicates that the
tl'ue incidence may be m -uch. hlgher. This is so

because bepatitiis B has an incubation per"oo of


up to six months, so that the <:lisease may not appear unti1llong after t ,h e "transfusion. Drs.:J O'11.n B
.A]sever and Peter Van Schoonhoven wrote in
Arizona .illedicine:
"'Its incidence over ilthe past ten to tItteen years
in large oomm.u:n1)~ blood centers has been about
1.% iIn z,eport:ed. r~trospeetive studies of clInically
evident disEase~ However, wben one studies trans:fused! patients prospectively In the laboralbO'l 'y at

2- to 4-week intervals, one finds up to a ten tImes


greater incidence oliDfcction.."ClZ

Look at thjs from another standpoint. It has


often been said that in the United States there
are 30.000 cases of posttransiusion hepatitis annually, with 1,500 to 3,000 deaths.,(1.5 If that were
the situation it would be serious enough. How..
ever, information provided by the government 7,s
Center for Disease Control points to a conservative
Dgw"e for hepatitis B cases as being 2-00,000 or
more annually."" And who can even estimate the
total number of transfusion- elated hepatitis ca'SE'S
fm- all North and South America, Europe, Africa
and Asia?
Of COUl"Se, some persons view the possibility of

getting hepatitis from a blood transi'tlsion as a

46

JEHOVAt1S 'WITNESSES AND THE QUesTION O 'P' BtOOI:)

justifiable rj k. A doctor might reason~ ~ wou d


rathe have my patie~t alive with hepatitis7 which
I can treat than dead from not having a transfusion.~' But such reasoning is not a valid basis
for viewing a patient's conscientious objections to
transfusion as 'suicidal" and unworthy of con-

sideration.
Can a puffent reasonably be uesurcd that he
will survive po9ttramdusion hepatitis!'
A sobering fact is that authorities admit that
about 10 to 1.2 percent of those contracting: serum.
hepatit]s from transfusions die as a result. S~ With
persons ,o ver forty years of age, the mortality rate
is 20 pen~ent---one out of nve. fill In patients over
the age of sixty, about half die from the hepa:titis.$"f
FurthTInOre~ there is no sure way to ,e liminate
tihe high risk 01 contracting hepatitis from transfusions. The Journal. of Legal Medicine acknowledged that "none of the now knO'Wll methods of
preserving hlood possess any antiviral properties.
Any modality that will destroy or even attenuate
the v irus of hepatitis will also destroy the blood

blood fraction. "B-II.


What about advances in testing techniques

to identify and thus eliminate tainted blood?


Dr. M . Shapiro. of the South African Blood Transfusion Service, l"eOOlltly pointed. out that ' feven
lvilli the most sens'iiti'\re tests perhaps only 1 in 8
or even fewer cases of post-tra.nsfusional hepatitis
are avoidable by laboratory screening alone of

donor bloods. " ,018


Consequently. even if serum. hepatitis were the

47
only posttransfusion disease danger" there would
be ample medical JLe(l,$on fora persan to have
reserva tions about accepting blood. The fact is..
though, that hepa.titis . s only one of the risks~
Note these others:
JEHOVAH'S WUNESS:ES AND THE QLllESTION OF BlOOD

nBlood shollid be considered a. dange

DUS

medi-

cine, and shou1d be used with the same cautiion


as, for eXaDlple7 m.orphlne. tIlo Thus, Professor
H. Busch, a director 0 transfUSion medicine.
ended a report to a convention of North German
surgeons. In it he mentioned a dilemma regarding
b ood! 1ransfusions. He said that for its optimum.

biological value donated blood should be transfUsed within twenty=four hm:lJrs; after that the
InetaooUc risks increase because of changes, in the
stored blood. On the ,o ther hand,blood must be
sto ed fora '1east sev,e nfy-tw,o hlOlIlrS 0 else it
may pass on syphilis. And even tests to idf'.ntlfy
syphilitic blood are not a safieguaJ."d, for they do
not etect syphilis in its, eal"ly stages_ There is no
need to deSCI' jbe here the damage that can come
to a person rcccl ing syphilis-infect d blood, as
well as the harm to his or her family.
The German l"eport also stressed the danger of
blood transfus~ons that spread cytomegalovi.l"US
infections and malaria. Cytomegalovkus, is known
to be especially dangerous for children. WiU1 ,good
reason~ then, the German doctors were warned 01
the u very serious~ even fatal, l",e sults" that are pos~
si
from ood transfus- ODS. And the American
1lIIedical Association advised that ''with the increase in global travel and the return Qf sen-icemen f'rrun endemic areas, there has been an jn~

48

J leH'O\l'AI-iI 'S WnNESSES AND THE QUESTION Of (l.lOOD

crease in the incidence

malaria in recipients of

blood transius' on.'~ll


In tr.opical areas there are .a numbex of other
diseases that can be transmitted by blood trans-

fusioDSt such as Chagast disease' (having a fatality


rate of .one out of ten), African trypanosomiasis
(African sleeping sickness) t yaws and fiiariasis. 1 :!:
Another danger that cannot be overlook.ed is
gro
bacterial ,c ontamination of blood. Certain
types of bacteria Call multiply even in chilled
blood; posing a grave threat to anyone- latm- receiving that blood. Though fewer patients experience this complication than, ,s ay, sermn hepatitis,
the I1esults are o"agic for those who do. The mortality rate is between 50 and 75 pel'Cent.;o.3
What does: the future hold as to dangers associated with blood transfusions ?i'The list of
transmitted dliseases," reports Dr. .Tohn A . Collins
of the Wasbingtoll University School of I'ledic-ne,
j~ill vary and will certainly grow, and considera'ble uneasiness may occur as more turn or-

rela ted viruses a.roe jdentUied in hUlnan blood~ >774


Accordingly... many h08pital8 ?'lOW require a patien.t to 8ign (I 'Waiver or agreement that ne tom
not hold the doctor or hospital l 'i able for snju/J'Y
resulting fr&m a blood tTa:n.~fusiO'Jl~ n
Does this brief consideration of only 807n6 o,f

the medical r i sks of blood mean that Jehovah~s


Witnesses object tOo transfusions primarily for
medical reasons ? NOt that . s not the case. The
fun.damental reason why tJwy do '1wt accept blcod
tmnsfusiCY.n8 is because of what the Bible says.
Theb's is basically a religious objection... not a

JIEHOYAH'S WITNE$SiES AND THE QUesTION OF IB!lOOD

49

~ne.

Nevertheless, the fact that there are


serious r'sks ill taking blood simply underscores
the reasonableness, even fl"om a medical standpoint, of the positioll that .Jehovah's Witnesses
take.
medical

ALTERN

or

.!U"J:ES:

If the course followed by Jehovah~s Witnesses


were a fanatical one that had no basis and unavoidably meant harm. to themselves and p -xhaps
others, there ","'ould be "Cason for concern. In this
connection it might well be asked;
Is this religious view taken by Jel,Dval,'s Wit ..
nesses SQ incompatible wit/I. the stondrds of
human so-Cietll and luith. medical knowledge that
it cannot be reasonably accommQd(d,cd?
The factual answer :is that the' Bible-based objection to blood certainly can be accommodated in
most cases by the use of alternative therapies.
As is well known. in cases of elective surgery,
doctors may "build up the patient's blood' before
and afterward, such as w-th amino acids and oral
or injectab e iron coIllpounds76 . ; this can lessen
any need for transfus on. Deep hypothermia (lowering the patient's body tempe ature) has proved
advantageous in minimizing blood loss during surgery. even on infants. 7S Similarly. -nducing hypotension (lowering blood pressure) can reduce the
bleeding lrom small vessels during surgery_ And
probably wbat has proved most sucoessful is meticu)ous attention to sealing oft even the smallest

50

J EH OVAH"S WITNESSES ANO THf QUESTION OF Bl.OOO

of cut v ssels. In the American JOU1*JtaZ of Obstet'J"ics and Gyn.ecQlofJY~ one doctor who has operated
on many of Jehovah's \VitnessL'S said:
"There i..'; no doubt that the situation wbere you
arc operating' rl thout the possib" ty of transfusion tends to improve yOUl.' surgery. You are a
little bit more aggres i e n da:mping e ery bleedtrig vesseL": 9

If ,a pa:l.ient has lost (l. gl,e ,a I; deal (!If blood


during surgery or through an acciderd. is the
uiew that. tlu~re is no alternative to blood a
reasonable one?

Some facts p esen1t:ed by Professor .Jrunes W.


I nman in HematoZogy serve as a fine: basis for
evalua ting the answer:,
.. 1000 is :not a. tonic or stinuuan ; it will not
p ornot wound healing or sUppJ"CS-S an iIliection;
and its ox;ygen<arrying capacity is rae-ely. it ever,
a limiting factor in surgery. A !Tan JU-8f.o'n os.erues
en ly to Q.1.tgrllcnt. total blood vol1.ll7nc, to' enha"'lc:e
he tXCygan.-carrying capacity of th.e blood, and as
a SOUTee of n01'?nal plasma constitu 'nts.n (Italics
addedl.)~

Consider first the matter or (Q1tg'l'1'Wnting total


blood 'vQl1L'nte.~ Quite often when a person loses
a great deal- of blood, what fundam Q tally is
neecle to prevent shod{ and death is to replace
the volwne of fluid lost. At a congress of th Medica) Associaton of South Afr ica, a blood
ansfusion specialIst ex"})laincd that a person m-ght Jose
up to 1.5 liters (over three pints) of blood and still
have over 60 percent of his red! cells. 8 1. an amount
adequate for tissue nourishment. But the person

JEI'iOV,AH'S WITNES$1ES AND liHE QUESnON OF ~lOOD

51

needs morefiuid in his vessels to keep the red


blood cells circulating.
The Bri 'ish j ourna~ Anaesthesia reported that
nonblood solutions do this m<:lre effectively than

do transfusions of [blood, for they do not reduce


cardiac ,e fficiency, a not unCOlnInon compli.ca tion
accompanying b[ood transfusion~ The article said
that on occasions when apparent y adequate
amount o ' ''''hole blood failed to produce the
desired result iin a case of trauma, using nonblood
SQ]ut'ons often produood dl'arnatie i mproveme'n t.
Hence, the article o Dserv,e d :
'"E\.'(>.n i.f an adequate supply of who e

Hable, hO\',rever. it
of choice for the ini
transfusion oJ: grossly
who have lost Dluch
ill V

blood is
is doub LfU] if it is the fluid
ial
a tm nt for the rapid!
hypovolacmic patients [those
blood] ,. "8%

Is it not log" cal that a person normally could


lose' the equivalent of a tmit (500 ce.) or more of
blood wi thout fatal esuIts'l Many persons have
donated a unit of blood .and then gone rjght on
\\fith their day's activities. Controlled .clinical study
has indicated that a person W' jth ~a large blood
volume may tolerate the loss of as .much as two
liters [2,000 ce.] of whole blood~ without requiring
anything besides replacmg the fluid lost with non-

b aod solutions. S3
Wha t, though, about ..enlumoing th.e. oo;ygenCCltTying capacity of blQOd~? Dacto'l'S know that
ali.:.e nati;;;c so ut:o
e ot really "blood substi
tnt :-. "Vhy not? Because the hemoglobin of "the
:red cells delrv 1]:"8 oxygen throughout the body.
Nonn ood solutions: do ot conta' this.

62

UHOVAtI'S WJiTiNESSres AND THE QUESnOM OF BLOOD

'Vith a pat;ien'l 117/w has lost a great ,d eal of


bl80d. must uih.ole iJ'l ood. Qr packed red cells
be utbnini6lered so as to su.pply oxygen to all
Ius b.ody?
This i s a view frequently ad "anced, but is it in
keeping with the facts?

A person normally ba about 1

or 15 gram:s of

hemGglobin in each 100 ,c c. of blood. Doc or generally take the position that 'under sophisticated
conditions a hemoglobin of 10.3 to 10.5 g aHlS is
regarded as the safe lower value for routine surgery.'8t But. in

actuality, much of a person's helno-

globin i s :in l'eserve for Use during strenuous

, ~er

tion; hence, a bedfast patient often is comfortable


with as Utile as 5 or 6 grams.!;:10 M. Keith Sykes,
Pro' essor of Clinical Anesthesia at the . ni versity
of L ondon, recently pOinted out: ~. Although most
centres choose a value of 9 or l!O g per cent as
the dividing line between acceptance and refusal
fOol" eIective operations, it must be emphasized that
th.ere is nG conclusive eViden e that values above
thi.s level are- 4safe' or ilia t values below this leve
i.mpart an extra riS . to surgery. It the clore seems
unreasonable to choose an arbitrary figure as an
acceptable haem.ogJobin lev.el.'~ Likewjse. Dr. Jeffrey K. Rain@s, o f Massachusetts General OSPltal.
sta ted that <4we can lei: the hemato-crit get much
lower than :va had thought. We used to think a
patient had to have a hemoglobin 01 JLO. but we
now know that is not:really SO."87 Dr. Ricardo Vela
of a departrrumt of ancsthes -a in 'Iadrid, Spain~
had experience in this connection w"th patients
'Who are J ehovah"s W tnesses. He wrote that very

JEHOVAH'S W ITNESSES AND THIE QU'ESTION Of BlOOD

53

low hemoglobin levels that formerlY would ha.ve


been considered as fo~bidden 'were surprisingly
well t ole ra ted by the patien.ts/'BS
There is another aspect of this matter that has
not been widely apPJlecia tOO, ev.en. in the medical
field,

Will a trcmsfusi-on intmediaiel'J enhance the


blood's ox!}'yell-carrging capacity?
.D.ofuny persons believe that it wilJ, but a r CeIl
edi torial . n Anaesthesia made this significant;
point : r~lt i$ worth relnembering also that the
hae'1?'toglobin of stored;!' citTated -red cells is not
fuUy available for tM tra~fBr of oxygen to the
tis-8'Ue-8 to?:' rome 24 oou-rs after transf'US-ian , _ ;
rapid blood t-ranstu.siCYJl. must therefore be rega:rded

pri-m an1y as a 'n!8Te volum.e expander in t1/A3 initial


stage8_~7il[) Researchers at Ohio State University
found that the :reason for this is that chemical
changes occur in stored blood . Their investigation
sho cd ha t blood stored more than ten days
cCdooo 'lwt improve or rreay e'ven 'tOOTS en OCC?Jgen
de-ivery -im'Y1'lleiiia.tely after transfusio'J'~,,~~ And they
f,o und that the oxygen delivery was stil. below
nonnal twenty-foUT hours later.-

What are some of the nonblo-od fluids used


as alternatives to bl()('id transfusions ? Are they
,b eing used effectively? Wh.at are their adoan..
tages?'

hobabJy the most "videly a'i.railable and most


frequently used emergency plasma. replacement is
simple saline solution (0,9 %), It is ealSy to prepare,

5-1

JEHOVAH.'S WrrNESS:es AND THE QUESnON O;F BlOOl:)

jllCA-pcnsive, stable and chern.ically compatible '1N"ith


human blood_!)~ Ringers l.actate ( -art:mann's) is
an additional electrolyte or crystalloid solution
that !has been successfully used in cas.es of nIBSsi V'e burns and :in surgery where patients have lost
up to, 66 P '. cent of the ftuid volume of their
blood.9 2:
!\nother approach is to replace lost blood with
colloids such as dextr,a n. 'T'hat i a cJ'nical :sugar
solu.tion that bas proved v.a J.uable both in surgery
and in treating burn cases and shock. 1I3 S ometimes
it i s com.bined with a buffered salt solu !ion so as
to draw on the best properties of each" Haemaccel

and

-gf;arcn, solut o , have also been


employed with good results in various operative
h/Jjd1'~e.t.hyl

situa .ions as plasma volume' expanders, iI ....


Each (;If these fiuids has lits own properties and
:merits, But regarding disasl\)er s ' tuatIons A naes-

thema conunen ted;


"Initially in the acute stage the exact fluid
chosen, provided ilia 11: i is not po:;iti ve.ly ll.ann.!ul, is

relatively urumportan t..


te, on ' the circulatory
',..01 umc has been ,e A--panded,. the speeifi,c r~qulre
Dle nts fo r a particular case must be taken in to cons1deratiQn,"g..:;
I

Does this meap. that these fluids are only for


emerg'e ncies? Not at all, Regard[ng ~can major
types of operation"~ surgeons at the University of
Kentucky Colilege of Medicine wro te:
"A hundred patients each lost 0 er 1.000 ml ol
blood while u:udergolng surgery and reoeiltcU two
t~ 'tll.l:Iee tilnes tbat .,.oluntc af Hartmann's solution..
Postopcra:ti ...c :mortality and morbkUty were not
PVP (Po]yillinylllYJrl:IOUdiJne) Is also still I:l.Iied .In .S:OJlle Jon4JS.

J EHOVAI1I"S WITNESSES AiNID ,HIE QUUTlON C f BLOOD

55

affected by th~ lack of blood In the replacement:


regimen..
_ De:spJ1l:e- t:h@ persIstent "tradition that
blood s the only effective :replacement .cor blood
loss, he practjce of using saUne solutions tor part
or all o.f blo.od :substitution has gained. ground in
JDany centers""OO

Though for religious .reasons .Jehovah"s Wit-

nesses wiill not accept blood, they have no such


<lbjectiions to the use of nonb1ood pTasma expanders. From the standpoint of a doctor, then, these
products have the ad"\.TB.ntag'e of being usable with
\\7i:tness patients. But thcr,e are nurnenms other
advantag

"*Non-bio ogicru substitutes for blood/I wrote


Professor E.. A. ]'foffitt of Canada, ! 'can ibe manufactured in large quan ities and stored for long
periods of time. . . . The risks of blood transfusion
are the ad 'antages of plasma substitutes: avoidance of bacterial or viral infection~ transfusion
reactions and Rh sensitization."D1'
There is another notewo tby benefit from using
plasma expanders. When hwnan blood is stored,

cheroical!s must be added to prevent coagulation.


Later when this Ib ]ood is given to a patient, the
additives can interfere with his own blood's natural albiliry to coagulate; continued. loss of blood
can result_ Heart surgeon Dr. Melvin Platt has
caned attention to the fact that 1:bi:s Pl'oblem is
avoided when "a neutral substanoo" such as,

Ringer's lactate solution rather than st,o red blood


is used.fJS
~lAJOR

SURGERY 'WITHOUT BLOOD,

Courageous doctors who have agreed to 'o per


ate on Jehovah's \Vitnes s wthout using b ood

56

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND TH E QUE'~mON OF B OOD

have often found the ea pe jence revealing. This


is illustrated !by rather recent developments in
open-hear surgery. In the pastl massive arrtounts
of blood were nor.mally used. But t!be surg.ical
team headed by Dr. Denton Cooley ,a t the Texas
Heart Institute decided to try opera.ting on J ehovah',s Witnesses:. Because the doctors co'Uld not
prime the needed beart.-lung pump with blooo or
adnllnistel!,' blood during OF after :suro-ery ~ 1:hey
empllo}o+ed nonblood plasma expanders. Dr. Cooley
r eports: I~e became s o impressed with the r ,c sul ts on. the J"eh.ovah~s Witnesses that we started
using the procedure on all OWl" heart patients.
We've had surprisingly good success and used it
in our [heart] transplants as ,"",ell!' He .a dded;
"We have a. contract with the Jehovah's W-t-

nesses not to givle a transfusion ill1der any cil"cwnstances~ The patients bear tbe risk then, because we dOln 't even keep blood on hand for
them. ' ~

Wha t have been the long=term results of ~b[ood


less cart surgery' on adults and ch -Jdren? Dr. .J erome H. Kay ,o f California wrote : ccw e have now
done approximately 6,000 open-heart operations
at the Saint Vincent's Hospital in Los Angeles.
Since we ha, ."-e not been u s ing b]ood for the
jority of patiients, it is 'o ur impression that the
patients do better. H 00 A Canadian study provided
.specific details, revealing that when nonblood
.fluids, such as: dC:h"tran and Ringer's solut"on, were
used instead of blood "the number of dea ths
dropped from 11 per cent to 3.8."101 This type of
surgery has alsO' successfully been done on Jehc-

JEHOVAH'S WrTNESSES AND THE Ql.IES"lIONI Of BLOOD

5'1

vah's: Witnesses and children in Norway, Australia,


South Africa.~ F.f-ance~ England and! Japan.
Exj:)E!Tienced surg,e ons ar,e aware. however, that
geneIal surg:cal patients account for a greater
proportion of the blood used than those undergoing more d :am a tic operations such as open-heart
surgery. What has occurred with J ebov,a hs "Wit
nessIE'S l'equ-ril1g more conunon operations where
sub tantiaI quantities of blooo are normally used?'
nder the title "1\.'Iajor Surgery in Jehovah's
Witnesses' a group of New York doctoll"'S .related
a number of cases involvIng extensive surgery,
such as the total renloval of cancerous organs, and
exp ained that by employing precise surgical t le chruques these procedures can be done without
blood.l~2 Other procedw: es, successfully perionned
without administering blood include radical head
and neck operations, e].."tensive abdominal surgery
and hemipei vectomics (amputa troD of leg and
hip) .103 After removing a larg'e brain aneurysm
On a Witness Dr+.1. Posnikoff took exception to
the hcurrent opinion of D1.0st neurosurgeQllS that

transfw;ioD of blood lis absolutely es ential u for


such brain surgery ~ He urgoo other :surgeons t<not
to routinely deny major operation to those who
may be in desperate need but cannot morally accept blo-od transfus-on_"1.~
The conclusion reached by Dr. Philip R. Roen
in 4'Extensiv,e Urologic Surgery Without Blood

Transfusion" was!
~"Our ,e xpeIi nces willi Jehovah's Witnesses .r equiring operative procedures: ha - demons tFated to
W , tha
bl'lDod transfusions are not nocessarily es-

5S

JEHO'''AH'S W ITNJ;SSes .... No. THE QI.UE,snON Of 1'1,.001)

sential even when hemoglobm lev

are -OW"--aLS

low as 5 IGm... per 100 .mI. _ . . The' stand <itt .fe"hovah'


Witnesses in refusiiIg blood tr-ansfusion during necessary l11.ajor a.nd ,extensi,,"',e operative procedu~
provjd@s at conS;iderabJe problenJ and. chaHenge .for

the urolOfPst. Sucb patients cannot and r.nu.!rt not


be abandoned because of heir r~n ious beliefs.
We have not he itated to perl'o nn any and all in
die ted surglesJ procedures in the .fare of proscribed
b!aod repla.ce:r.ne:n.t.'1(l,5
"'HAl:' WILL YOU DO?

In coru(dering the position .Jehovah's Witnesses


ke on, blood, we have given attention to certain
im rtant aspects. We bav,e examined the basis
fo thei refusing bJood and have seen that they
do so for religious reasons based on the Bib e'. We
hai.-re also reviewed the ethics involved, showing
thnt it is 'tile right of each person toO determ ine
what will be done to his body and to decide about
medlca] trea.tment for himself Rnd h -s chil en.:In
W'lalyzing the doeto ~s role, we have seen that
treatln,g an indiVidual in accord with the patient's
beliefs -s consistent \.Vith the fundamental rille ~ples, of the medical profession. And, ';n discussing
the medical aspects of blood transfusion, we have
demonstrated that the positionJ'ehovah's Witnesses take can be accommodated, medically. Case

histiJrres: prove that in lnost ins tan,c es skiIlool'


ccmra.geous a.oc-tors. can successfully treat Wirtness
patients withou;t employing blood.
While all of this may be so, we should not look

upon the matter as merely an abstract discussi on


of ail interesting question. Each of us .may be
called upon to use this information in deciding
what to do personally.

JEI"tO'Y'AlH'S WITNISSSES AND TKE QUESTION OF BLOOD

JVhat afJout; a dtx:.ior?


In the .light of all that we

h~ve

oonsidered,

59

doctor should appreciate that :.1ehovah s Wimesses


are not "suicidal" religious fanatics who oppose an
medical care. Rather, they are a reaso able, moral
poople who are anxious to stay alive; they love
life and! good health, which is why they s-eek qualified m dieal care. But a ,d octor should also understand that J ,ehcrvBb's: Witnesses have seriously
thought about their religious beliefs and are
thoroughly oonvinced 1:hat they and their families
must not aocept blood. So, when confronted with
this refusaJ. to accept hlood,.:medical personnel
ought not view it as some emotional .,. him that
can be ignored. It is an irnporlant relig,iQUS conviction that should be respected" honored.

this me,a n ,i n practice?


means that, in order to show respect for

What
t

d6e8

time-bonored principles, blood 'J1l:ust nat be forced


upon ,o ne 0/ J eho'lxih/s W:i.tne.~68. True, for a doctor to accommodate theirreligioUis ,o onviction
might require adjusting !his usual therapy. But,
viewing matte s on a long-range basis, is it not
better for medical treatment to be somewhat circrn:nscr:iibed by reli:gious convictions than for fl1n,d amental I' 1-gious beliefs to be dictated to or
mrerrd,den by current medkaJ practice? Balanced
consideration proves that to be true. By cooperat-

one of Jebovah's Witnesses a doctor can


show his genutne commitment to the upholding
of bwnan rigbts ,a nd his :respect for free exercise
of religious conscience. At the sa.me time he will
ing

~1th

60

JIEHO VAH'S W li NESS'ES A ND TH E QUESTION Of BLOOD

be treating the "'wbole man," using those thernpies


that serve to heal .the patient physically 'Ii 'role not
harming him cmotionally or spiritually. This will
hc in the patient's lasting interests and will dignify
the basic ethics that the doclor is dedicated to
uphold.

lYhat about Jehovah's Witnesses or others


who are concerned wit.h applying Gad's Word
in their [if) es?
Our review of the question of blood should
furthcr cnha ce one's respect for the Bible's injunctions agailli>-t the sustaining of one's life with
blood.
Ench Christian rightly makes the determination
to continue steadfast in his faith. In dealing \.vith
ll1edical personnel, the ehri tian should display
reasonableness and a cooperative spirIt, at the
saIne time making it clear that any m.edical treatment offered 1l1ust be cons -stent ~ith his religious
beliefs. uch as his refusal to accept blood. If surgery is necded, it ill be important to discuss with
the doctors ahead of time the Christian stand on
blood; so as to obtain their assurance that under
no circumstances will blood be administcrcd before, during or aftc the operation. And if a particular doctor does not feel that he can perform the
surgery without resorting to blood, by the Christian' Imowing that beforehand he can seel~ the
s~.rvices of another physician.
In striving to uphold God's law on rood, Jehovah's Witnesses lllanifcst the-r appreciation of the
fact that their life is from and dependent upon the

JBfOVAH'S WITNESSES AND THe

'QU~nON

OF SLOOI:)

Creator and Lifc-Giver. He has said in the Bible


that a Christian's happi ess and continued life in
the future are based upon faith ,a nd obedience.
(1 John 2 :3-6) For that reason the early Christia.ns were ,",,"illing to risk their present lite ather
than go cont...-ary to their religious beliefs. J ehovah's \lVitnesses today we just as detcrmined to
maintain their good relationShip with God. So
they will continue to obey the Biblcs command to
'absta-n from blood/-Acts 15:29.

REFEliENCE-S
Jl'.. The Gift Rcl4lionlfh.~p (1971), by
muss. Il. '%7.
2. Ca!11I.ft '.8

N UW

A'P'O:rtl~,

'Pesta~
I). 50.

ro!.essor RJcl'lanl M. TJt>-

aomm.etdlil:ifiC.s;

rke Aets 01 UIo;I

vo1. n.

3. Getl.e.s'\.s - A Commentarr,r (19Sl.) , by Ger f1.ar.:l ''On RRd. p. J.28.


4. GeneMlt U9'74). 'by B.. .JaCOb. edJtecl by E. I , and W. Jaco'b,.
p . 64.
5. 'The ToJ'4/I.: A Mod):Nt Ccnn:ms:ntar~, GcncBis (19'74), bY W.
Gum;llf}r Plaut, D. so..
6. Z-tlrcJl:er Bi tJdkommcnta:r(.'l .1. llf08C ~-11. (1.007). J:). 3$0.

r..c HtatorJr (J/ the Oh1'isian Oh.t.I'rcl1 nS37). by .VJUlcun


.r o.ne.s. p. 1.06.
'8. Tc-rt1ir~Wut, .J1pologeff.cal WorJc;s. a'nd M"ntc~\.Ul F'clw. Oct.:n.-(us,.
lr
I~ue d by RUaolph Arot' m nn (.l.9'50) , I). 83.
9. Th-e Aft( NWefl Fa(~~, VoL IV. pp.,
SG.
O. Th.6 A",ic- Nfcmte F'a;t~. Vol. IV, p. 192.
n, Til. Ecc/.cstaSticGl.l HiBtOl"ll' of ti~c Soxond ana '1'1:lt,..a Otmturiqa(~845}, D)' John Kuy D!&l!top oif Llncoln. p. u6.
lZ.. The Acts of (M ApostlBS (1958)', by GulsC"Ppc Rkclototl. p. 2oS3.
13. Nt ~ S and. PO~t-Niqcme ,,'a.the1'"8 01 th,eo C}z.rilt! (U~. 0'h~T""dl.. by
hUlp SCh{ltr and H~ Wac VOJ. XlV, p. 395.
l!I. TC;1I"rulUaH~ Vol. I. transl a~d by C. DOdsson (1.842), p
09.
1!5. L"U~.s- Worklb Vol. 4..l (Church and Mlnls ry IU>, edllied!
by Eric 'V. Grlt:~ch. D. 28.
l.S. TI.. Co:nnp!ctc W01I"Im 01 the Ret? And7"CW FulWT (1:B3S), p. '"i'5:4
17. The American 8urgoon, .Ju.I:y ll96$. p . 542.
1:8. li'ordka:m Law ~BW, VoL, -:14, 191'5, pP. 23, 24.

ss.

62

J EHOV'AH'S WIl'NlE$SES AND THE QUIESHON OF BLOOD

19. A.mcrl..xul .1()UnWZ 01 Ob.atctriCII

""eI ~routl~.Ja.n

20.
21.
22.
23.

p _ -S!l5_
ill 'Clicolcg<U l1':Q<1'm8 With L lOat: AHal3i'Jlfa (I976) pp..
Medical '1"'.M.1=:n6 (In Gru:nmn) .Matrch W. 19T6, po. 30.
RUf{J'ef'3 LeI ~et!>. VoL XXVI. 1913, Po 244.
The W~ MOO:;crd JouM\.al. August. 1967. p. 3'15_

2i1.

~er

25.

:w.
27.

28.
29.
30.

.31.
32-

33.

:1, 19G8~

24. 38.

JouTnal 01 t.hB" A-m=wan }i!Bdjetd ....,~.. oe:taeiQ", septe.mbe~'


5, l.OOG. (I;lJ). ~. '795_
Fardh.am. Law Rea.-WW, Vol_ 44.. 1.975. p . .20_
Tho JOW'?WZ' 01 h~miow:' 8u;'r!)C'r1I .June 1.9!l7. p. 1.60'.
The' CapO C01~n.ty JO)l;TJQ.IIIl .Juno 1967. p . !5.
U1QtverritJ,r 01 San FnuzclBco l.(rw~~. SQmm r l.975~ p . :l$.
Sl1>rgCT1l. Ch!necologj/ ~ ObrctriCs. Ab)r-ll ll!59'. pp. !)()3.. 504M~~al Fonns with LegaZ AnalJllHlt (1fYi'5). p _ 8S.
U,..!~ fI QJ 'so... ?ro:m,.;;~ 14w Review. Summor 1975. pp27 .28.
EmBr9BftciI!l'8 tn Meli!:1caZ PraettcB (19'11). edttedJ by C. AU311
Bttc-,b. P. 5tG4.
~~
Med:irinj~~fJ' W~m~rift.
Dece='ber 19. llJI75

222.
34. New Yo-rk State Jow-nal .of MedicfflS'. May :lfIt76. p _
35. Pard1r;am Law RB"L>tsw. Vol.. 36. 1968. D- 6S1.
$ . McdjDOl TribUJil6 (1n Gennan). March HI'. 1.9'16. p.
O.
$1- J\.famnB(l>:ot ..... Kl'ner 6f 01. . 186
'n. 1393. 350 P.<M 093. U04.
38. Ga1':iad a~ Mcds.cn~ A..sroc;atfon Jv=wal, Fcbru:.ury 18. 1961.
p. 432_
39. P'onmsw 8dence .JulY' 1972. p. 135.
4(). (;
DiI'.oo(Z (l.~a BOOj 'ly o.wr.n. by A. D . Fttrr, p . ll5.
4l.. Q:rim.{t tma DclinQuC1I'0lf, A prtl 1968. p. 116.
42. Tsa-aa
edk:[-ns, ]!)e ce:mbe~ :il97O. p . 2S.

43.. '1'M

J~

1007. p.

1.ro.

(l/ 'her A mm"iCQ.1'lo A(6(it

4J$O~atio",

Jl.'I.iY

3.

41. 0ue!lt~1i'J'o"'~... 1lof.arch l,Q. ;).975.


45. Dnz9$ (l'9T.3), VOll. 6, p. 100<.
4G. Obll't6trlk 000. gvnek.Ologt (1002)" e4!te~ by Quo! Ccmze1l.
p. 206..
47. O,oa. rooa Ii.".a Bocidv ~191'2)~ b)' A. D. li'arr. p. 32.
48. Die WeLt, October 14. 1.9'?5.
49'. Th.6 ,J~i oJ t1l<o: .4m-cr-OCIn MC4ica~ Ae"09octGliO)t.. ADm :t2,.
l197'6 . p. .l!6UL.
.
50'. OUt;.f.c(lJ Ucmotoeogy (1..974), by P.ro.I.csso:r
M. WJn
ttobe, p_ 4745L Le Oon~ M~~ka-l,. .i\cP1r"lI 1. U72. po. ~
52. ~, Fe!) r~ J$7(il. liP. 2$. 2453. ,1caicl EOOffom~. Deoembr ~ , l..OO'T. Po 9~
54. Tho Ncnoftal Ob~. J anua r y 29, :191'2, p.. 1.
:i'I5. BO'r>l.tltCI'W Mcl!i GlaZ JOU'l'lI.Gl~ April llY76. po 476.

JE!J-IOVAH'S WITNESSES AND

'On:

QUESTION OE

Looe

63

:!OIl. Chicago '1'f'i1IU1'W, Oct ober 10. :L.<I6e. p. 2.


m. SurOer?h Fcbruury 19'14,. pp. 27-11. 21S.
58. ,r .Jetnatoi1.ogll (:1975). by Prot Cl;sor J m es W. LInmnn. p. 991 .
59. Jo:u,r;tQ.j. of B'Or.etl;8W ,Sc[ ClWe8'. January :1'999. p. 87'.
00. ThEir Gift: JU.l4.ffcm ~~ ..:p (J.97.1J, by Proiessor R1char M . T Umu$S, p . 142GL JournlU OJ ..fIygE efte~ OeLObel" :l9'l' P. 117S; So:tdl1_ MlSdtcal
J~TnaJ, April 1976, p. 477.
ArL..-mJ4 MI!:'dlcl:ILe. Apdl 1974. p. 263.
63.
~i8 of fh~ '!o,T<;nQ 1"0'l'1I: Acadsm.y of 8cf.smee-{t. J"s;mJ;a:nr 20.
1.975. p . 1'91.
64. ~ ~ .10U1"'NaZ <0.1 -fr..e Medf~l 8ci:~. septembcrOctober 1975, Dp . 276, 2Sl.; M(R'buhlya.1'Id MorMlJ y fVeckly
Beport~ M.aq/' 7.
ill'?S. p . 3; J~tio-n ,News" No... em.'b r~
Dece.mbcl: :1972, p. J.8.
6S. Scafidinawian JOIU'JroOJ: 0/ InfEXtwWl .Di:soo:se.3. Vol.
1974r
,D. 286.
66. R~~g'Y (19"ro), b). PrOIe-sSlOI" .}tIme "iV. LiInmP. 9!;l4..
67. The Gii-It Rcl'at1ona~~'p C19'i.l), by Professor RIchard M. Tlt:mu , p. l 'd7.
G8. T/;I:e Jo~j',~ oJ L gal M ~'cf._. J'un
9'ro, p. 19,.
69. 8out'h AJrioan M cd:icaZ Jo,~T'JIIa~. J'atJUOJi"Y 24. ::n9'ro. p . 107.
70. Pta ~V.aZ'f. December 9 . 19711.
'i'L Gurn:mll P'N~,pl
01 Blooa :I'rQ.~fua;o., (l.973h p. IS.
72. Troptca:l. D~= Bulu:U~t, Scptcrnbor ll9'12, pp. S28, 848.
1:3. l:le:r.-urtology (l975). 'by PT'o!essor J'run'Cll 'V. L!DJ:EJ.ah. p. 995.
7 . SU...-g.CJ'V~ F bru.an' J!S74., p. 275.
75. Mcd1co!'C:9a~ Forms wi';rr, Legal Ana.ly.s~ 097S). p. 83.
,6. The .JO'fD":na~ 01 T1tofiu:1c and. Cal'diovascu!ar JSu.T'gerv# J~lY
19i'4. P. 377. Mall'/) Gl~-nic PToc:eecUng8~ , "o',,"cmbor 1976, Jl. 725.
78 . Mea.-i>eal World .illeu."3. December 4 ,. 1.970, p . 7 .
1'9. AmUTWmn JOJUw..:iI 01 Ob tofr -C$ a;nc.f ~rogl.l. June l!., ;11168.
p. S95.
SO. H,">7YKJtoloU21 (1.975) . by Pro , SSQr .James \"1. Ll nma:n. p- 985.
81. ,S(ffi;th A~ M<:d;;CW JOUT'tDaJ, J'ununry 24. 1976, P. l.O'7i.
82. A:lla6Btlwda. luly 1968, pp.. 3!:IS, soo.
sa . ..1:1'<mi'l'Ca 01 B!IU'UCT;!I, J an.1.JatI'Y :1.969. p '. 5i2..
M. A~th~. .July .l.968, D. 413; MG']IO ~iO' .P~QC'IS(:Ungs,
No 'em'bel;' .J.976. p , '1:216.
85. POS'.tgraOCUlll-t ,JZ 4r.cUt NO\"ertl~r '19;';9. p. A44,
86. C-a.naclian AnaC'sth-6tisW 8001 ttl Jo~l, Ja.:nwny )..975, p., l'k
87 .~N
<J.@(I,rine. May l!Jt75, p . 38.
88. BUHiOt.IJ.GQI1, 1'1ae'tDatoklglca. ''In :tentlGnsJ JIe= odlltttJon. No.
n. 1!n'5. P. 27ft
89. Ana.eJJtAmritz. Mam:'Ch 1.975. Po :RiO.
00. ColuIlJilus, Ohio .. PJuJ Dispat'clt.. AU;f!1lSt 31, 1972, p. 1B..
9l. A#a.eat1t~. July J:!)6S, pp. 418. 41l9.

ea.

e.

64

JEHOVAIH'S WflINCSSl:S AiI"4D l"H I: QllJlilSi lOINl Of B LOOb

9'2. A;I\'1_J8 01 too New York .d~ 0/ BCiC':IWCIt, Atl glillS't 1.4.
1968, p . 905; TIw Journal ofths A.merican Medica~ .A&1tOCiat ton, _ larch. 29, ~971.. D. 2fYIT.
93. Bl.ood Trcntll'/u.rian in 01j:?Jical Medici:tIB U972) , by PrO:[eI5sor
P. L. lJololllsQZ', I)p. J5lO. llIJ.

an.

94. Bw-!9:i-=l Cl1'1\l~ oOJ NOrth Am~m. Jr\me 1975, m;..


0Ci AnGe8Ui,e.ria .Jul y 19G8, p. 416.
9. The Jounlal al the .d:mE'Tica~ Medical AsSOci.at;:on-, Febnmry 5,
l.~

'97~

Pt}. a9!), 401.

JOut'?~, .n:lJtuary ~'975. p. :12.


August 1:976. p. 14.
The San D iego Un cnL,. sunday" DeceIl!lDer Zi. 1'970. p . A~:w.
Tr~1il J0'\.4.r.ta 01 the ./hn.01'icon McdtC(lol: AIt.s~ ,0
.Decem.ber
3. :L9'f3, p . ~31.
The Toronto .star, No... ember 22. 19?5. p . A8.
.Nsw York 8tat.e J o~n=l of Me,:J\cins,. May 1976, pp. 765.. 766.
~'he J0141"1'1al. of t.he A.mcr1ic.::m ll-lelltlcal ~4.B-sociat"Wn, F'ebruary!G,
9GS, r;. 399.
o.lltlifO-rn-ia- ~ uaicifW, F lu:u.ary 1:9(;,"', ])l). l24. l.Z7.
Nf:1.U Y(WJ.: Strr...c JOli.rnat 0-1 Medj~, October 15, l.B7.2, PJ).
O(J.tWd~

98. The Elk:r

00.
100.

10:1..
1 0'2".
~(lJ .

1M.
llI5.

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