Jehovah's Witnesses and The Question of Blood, 1977
Jehovah's Witnesses and The Question of Blood, 1977
Jehovah's Witnesses and The Question of Blood, 1977
TABLE OF CONTE TS
Wi~'
Do Jehov h s "Vi
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
IN
NATION~
BROG
BmL
N
C.
Yo
U.S.A.
4:
17
2D
24
33
38
41
49
55
58
,6
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~
Of' stOOl)
lOOD
greater v
JEHOV'At-t,",$ WI
However, 'DaS
ESSES AN
tht~
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
alien in their
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.
jt~"
~Leviticus
J EHOVAH'S
wr
10
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 ~
11
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
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
Y CUBI 'l'IAN
AND BLOOD
13
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
14
Or
BtOOD
hU1naTI
blood ?"8
AlsQ>~
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-
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
IllOst
~6
Or
BlOOI!)
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.
17
-Acts
5 :28, 29.
life-
18
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
19
20
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
21
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'
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
22
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
23
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
24
,own."%3
flOOd that conta.ins blood and. medically administered blood. But how are ()thers affected by tlrls
stand, such as doctors who treat Witness patients?
25
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
Wl'Otc in
26
wer,e s'Iw.servient to
con8~ientious
medical jltdg-
21
28
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
21
G DocrORS 0
LJ:ABJLIT'Y
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
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
Regarding the situa-ron n England, E'T.nergenties in M ed'ical Practice said: "If the position has
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.
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-
32
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'
83
!he becomes unconscious."ZIli Underscor,' ng the matter more ernpha.ticallY7 the Supreme Court of
Kansas declared:
4~
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
34
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
35
36
BlOOI)
of
parental
responsibility.
:In
Scotland t
~]igious
37
blood~
38
a patient as a
'~whole
,3 9
life?
40
QUlf5TIONI Of BLOOD
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
"acts
42
43
Mril.
L .,la:Icy.
on R.ad,QM
Cal'dio<
clJI~bodi.1.
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
These numerous
of transfusion reactions
are indeed serious, .for they can cause death . .Let
types
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-
45
46
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.$"f
FurthTInOre~ there is no sure way to ,e liminate
tihe high risk 01 contracting hepatitis from transfusions. The Journal. of Legal Medicine acknowledged that "none of the now knO'Wll methods of
preserving hlood possess any antiviral properties.
Any modality that will destroy or even attenuate
the v irus of hepatitis will also destroy the blood
47
only posttransfusion disease danger" there would
be ample medical JLe(l,$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
DUS
medi-
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
malaria in recipients of
49
~ne.
ALTERN
or
.!U"J:ES:
50
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
51
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%
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
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
, ~er
53
5-1
and
55
56
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. ' ~
5'1
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
are -OW"--aLS
h~ve
oonsidered,
59
What
t
d6e8
~1th
60
'QU~nON
OF SLOOI:)
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.
aomm.etdlil:ifiC.s;
vo1. n.
ss.
62
""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.
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.
$1- J\.famnB(l>:ot ..... Kl'ner 6f 01. . 186
'n. 1393. 350 P.<M 093. U04.
38. Ga1':iad a~ Mcds.cn~ A..sroc;atfon Jv=wal, Fcbru:.ury 18. 1961.
p. 432_
39. P'onmsw 8dence .JulY' 1972. p. 135.
4(). (;
DiI'.oo(Z (l.~a BOOj 'ly o.wr.n. by A. D . Fttrr, p . ll5.
4l.. Q:rim.{t tma DclinQuC1I'0lf, A prtl 1968. p. 116.
42. Tsa-aa
edk:[-ns, ]!)e ce:mbe~ :il97O. p . 2S.
43.. '1'M
J~
1007. p.
1.ro.
4J$O~atio",
Jl.'I.iY
3.
'On:
QUESTION OE
Looe
63
ea.
e.
64
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.
'97~
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100.
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