The Patient Body

In the Blood

Published on June 24, 2015

“The Patient Body” is a monthly column by Ann Neumann about issues at the intersection of religion and medicine.

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By Ann Neumann

“Every moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you; even as the green herb have I given you all things. But flesh with the life thereof, which is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat” Genesis 9:3–4

In our global cosmologies, blood is sacred, repulsive, a sign of both salvation and damnation. It is the carrier of life, disease and even personal characteristics, like pride or sophistication or criminal behavior. We are guilty when we have blood on our hands, our feats or failures are in our blood, enemies have bad blood between them. “Blood impresses the imagination,” wrote Dennis J. McCarthy in the Journal of Biblical Literature in 1969. Blood’s attending powers are something we may or may not believe in, but blood is also a medical science. The Jehovah’s Witnesses faith, in particular, has caused both conflict and pioneering advancements in medicine’s use of blood.

Charles T. Russell, a young pastor prone to a full beard and unwaivering trust in his own interpretation of the Bible, founded the Jehovah’s Witnesses in the late 1800s near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He and a collection of students devised their faith out of a comparison of prominent church teachings at the time with “what the Bible really teaches.” Russell went on to establish The Watchtower Society and magazine, drawing on what Carlo Petrini, the Head of the Bioethics Unit at the National Institute of Health in Rome, Italy, has called a “literal millennialist interpretation of the Bible.

Jehovah’s Witnesses are broadly (and reductively) known for two things: knocking on your door when you least want or expect it; and refusing blood transfusions that could otherwise save their lives. While the medical technology for transfusions has existed for centuries, and the Jehovah’s Witness faith has too, their conflict is fairly recent. British physician Richard Lower is broadly credited with performing the first successful blood transfusion between two dogs in 1665. Nearly three hundred years later, in 1945, Jehovah’s Witnesses first stated their opposition to transfusions. Citing various verses in the Bible, including Genesis 9:3-4 (above), Leviticus 17: 10, 12, and others, Witnesses declared that “consuming” blood, either while eating (vegetarianism is part of church doctrine) or via transfusion, is not permissible for believers.

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The refusal of blood is not a matter of the soul’s loss, but of violation of the body, according to Witnesses. Medicine has been grappling with how to understand the refusal of blood ever since. One such medical body, the Belgian Advisory Committee on Bioethics, sought clarification of the consequences of blood transfusions from the Christian Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses of Belgium in 2001. The Congregation responded:

“the problem is unlikely to be seen in terms of resurrection and life eternal. He or she would more likely be devastated by the feeling that someone had taken advantage of a moment of weakness due, for example, to illness or unconsciousness, to impose a form of treatment totally at odds with his or her wishes and consent.”

Petrini writes in a 2014 article for Blood Transfus (linked above) that reconciling the Jehovah’s Witness patient’s desires with what a doctor may deem standard, makes necessary care “extremely problematic.”

“Failure to act may lead to criminal charges of negligence or even, should the patient die, of culpable homicide; intervention, on the other hand, could lead to criminal charges of trespass against physical integrity or to claims for damages by the patient for violation of the right to self-determination.”

However, from the Congregation’s clarification (which focuses on consent) and Petrini’s above concerns (doctors are potentially damned if they do or don’t), it’s clear that refusal of any kind can be a challenge for patients and doctors who have differing ideas of how to proceed with treatment, whether they’re stated or not, whether they’re religious in nature or not: a cancer patient who chooses not to undergo routine and largely effective chemotherapy; a pregnant woman who chooses to carry a terminal fetus to term even though her life will be endangered by doing so; an ALS patient who chooses to stop eating and drinking in order to avoid the end stages of the degenerative disease.

The hamstring in all this patient choice, however, is when a patient is not able to give consent (if they are either incompetent or unconscious), or when the patient is a minor or a fetus. Internationally, the courts have intervened in the case of minors, almost uniformly ordering treatment because the child is not yet of the age to make such medical decisions. In the case of fetuses, particularly in the US where politically and socially influential groups perceive a fetus to be a life worthy of protection, courts often override the consent of the pregnant patient.

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Three primary examples come to mind when you consider conflicts between religion and medicine: abortion, euthanasia, and (strangely, fascinatingly) Jehovah’s Witnesses’ refusal of blood transfusions. Although Jehovah’s Witnesses number only about 8 million worldwide and cases of conflict are rare, their belief that the bible prohibits blood transfusions is a classic media attention-grabber. A number of recent cases highlight this.

In the UK in December 2014, a judge was asked to intervene on behalf of a young boy who had received extensive burns and required an infusion of blood for survival. The boy’s parents refused the blood transfusion on religious grounds. “I have no doubt at all that they love their son dearly. I also have no doubt that they object to the receipt by [their son] of a blood transfusion because of their devout beliefs. I hope they will understand why I have reached the decision which I have,” Justice Moylan told The Guardian at the time.

Because the child was too young to make his own medical decisions and because his parents were seen as endangering his life, the judge was asked to intervene. In countries with modern medical systems, this tends to be the pattern: caregivers become concerned when Jehovah’s Witnesses refuse treatment for their children and ask the courts to step in. Adults, however, are generally permitted to deny any medical treatment for themselves they wish, and the courts have a long history of jurisprudence that enforces such decision-making.

Even in a contested case in Michigan, courts ruled in January 2014 that doctors were correct to follow a woman’s advanced directive. After the death of Gwendolyn Rozier at St. John Hospital in 2007, her estate sued the physicians who had attended her, claiming malpractice. Rozier received a donated kidney from her daughter. She requested not to be given a blood transfusion during the transplant procedure. When her body rejected the kidney it was removed and she died less than two weeks later. Her husband and family supported Rozier’s wishes and the judge concluded, “The choice was hers to make, whether for reasons of religion, or for altogether different reasons entirely, or in fact for no reason at all.”

But a case in Australia shows that medical, legal and perhaps social support for patients’ autonomous decision-making can fall apart. Reported in the April 2015 issue of Internal Medicine Journal and picked up by both the Sydney Herald Tribune and The Daily Mail, is an account of a 28 year-old Australian woman who was diagnosed with Leukemia when nearly seven months pregnant. The hospital recommended that she undergo a caesarean section to deliver the fetus and then begin chemotherapy but, because the delivery and cancer treatment would likely have required a blood transfusion, the woman refused on account of her Jehovah’s Witness faith.

Both she and the fetus died—despite an 80% cure rate for women and “reasonable” outcomes for fetuses when Leukemia is diagnosed in the second or third trimester. “Staff were distressed, grappling with what was perceived as two ‘avoidable’ deaths,” doctors Biscoe and Kidson-Gerber wrote at Internal Medicine Journal. “Circumstances where foetal and maternal autonomy conflict, or where foetal beneficence conflicts with maternal autonomy, create challenges,” the doctors write, “All decisions should be strictly within the parameters of informed consent – disclosure, comprehension and free consent – and place patient autonomy at the forefront.”

Biscoe and Kidson-Gerber also explain why they decided to write about this woman’s case: “There is little published information to assist physicians to manage their own anxieties, doubts and potential moral disagreement with the patient, and to help them maintain respect for a patient and continue to deliver good medical care.”

Their words are a profound reminder that doctors are people too, and not merely representatives of a consensus on general medical ethics. They come to their patients with their own ethics, faiths, prejudices, politics and opinions. Biscoe and Kidson-Gerber state that understanding the root of Jehovah’s Witnesses’ opposition to blood transfusions is helpful to a better relationship between doctor and patient and for a more robust respect for patients’ autonomy. While I grant that this statement is probably true, it’s worth asking if the reason for refusal of treatment, particularly when it is connected to faith, plays a role in public policy regarding patient consent.

In a Sydney Morning Herald article, journalist Amy Corderoy uses the Biscoe and Kidson-Gerber case to point to what she perceives as a growing area for conflict. New medical technologies that can be performed on fetuses in utero (with a patient’s consent) are colliding with a recent Australian bill that would make it a crime to harm or kill a fetus (a “pro-life” law that would thwart a patient’s consent). Operating on a fetus that has, say, a faulty heart valve should, according to established rules of patient autonomy, require a woman’s consent. But the bill would override that consent if the woman makes an informed medical decision that contradicts broader (Christian) religious ideas.

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Corderoy reminds us that medical advancement often challenges faith-based ideas and that new technologies can not only save lives but also change our ideas of what life is. Our assumption—and Corderoy’s—is that faith and medicine are always in conflict. But that’s not the case. Sometimes they work in tandem, sometimes one ultimately catches up with the other. Laws can then reflect what shakes out between the two. The issue of Jehovah’s Witnesses and denial of blood transfusions is held up as a worthy case study because it pushes us to consider how society and the law decide what is more important: faith or medicine.

But we are entrenched, in Europe and the US, in a culture that is dominated by a form of religion that persistently fails to acknowledge the autonomy of some patients, regardless of their religion: women. In essence, Jehovah’s Witness cases are “cleaner” arguments because they can work with that religion-medicine dichotomy without getting messed up in the gender stuff that with which abortion is wrought with. Which is why the Biscoe and Kidson-Gerber case is so fascinating. It pulls in the autonomy of a pregnant woman, and sets itself up as an example of what autonomy should be. I am sure it’s not a best-practices example for many in the “pro-life” movement. Yet, as faith and ethics wrestle for jurisdiction over these vital questions, sometimes we encounter beliefs that direct medicine in new life-saving directions.

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In “Medicine Without Blood,” an article at The Atlantic this month, Alex Ashley examines new medical technologies that, with a push from the Jehovah’s Witness community, are pioneering ways to practice medicine without transfusions. Some methods include capture of a patient’s blood during surgery so it can be reintroduced into the patient afterward, or hemodilution, a means of extending the circulatory system to store blood outside the body until after treatment.

Ashley writes that after the AIDS epidemic, many people were focused on how to make blood safer, but even type-matched transfusions can cause debilitating or lethal outcomes such as a build-up of iron and allergic reaction. Over the past fifteen years, he writes, many have started asking, “If doctors can avoid transfusions, why wouldn’t they?” Proponents argue that the benefits of bloodless medicine, or blood management, are universal. Ashley writes:

According to the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Bloodless Medicine and Surgery, blood-management programs help hospitals cut down on unnecessary blood draws and the amount they spend acquiring and storing blood. Blood management has also been linked to shorter patient recovery times and reduced risk of infection.

In this light, the Biblical interpretations of Charles T. Russell, the founder of Jehovah’s Witnesses, appear prescient. Jehovah’s Witnesses have established a global network of Hospital Liaison Committees (HLCs) that mediate communication between patients and doctors. Ashley notes that there are some 140 HLCs in the US and their work has coincided with the recognition among hospitals and medical providers that managing blood use has broader benefits.

Writing as I do so often in this column about the conflicts surrounding faith and medicine, it’s refreshing—even edifying—to see religious beliefs as the source of medical advancement. Theoretically, if blood management is adopted across the globe, a pregnant Jehovah’s Witness with a Leukemia diagnosis won’t have to die. Nor will her fetus. But medically side-stepping transfusions doesn’t resolve the issues of consent that we see in places like Australia and the United States where constant challenges are made to a patient’s autonomy because she is pregnant. These challenges don’t come from Jehovah’s Witnesses, but rather from a dominant and politicized form of Christianity that has elevated fetal life above female consent. Medical advancements have given women the ability to determine the number of children they have and when, but these new technologies can’t—or yet haven’t—convinced bishops, pastors and social conservatives that a woman is trustworthy.

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Past “The Patient Body” columns:

Pathological Sex

Choosing Childlessness

Old Man in Winter

Oh Canada!

End-of-Life Books, 2014

The Great Organ Shortage

Tending to One Another

Moral Highs and Lows

Old Philosophical Certainties

On Suicide

Reading HuffPo’s “Hospice, Inc.”

The End of Eating

Wakeful Unawareness

Faith, a Chronic Condition

A Special Sustaining Power

Your Ethical and Religious Directives

Hospitals and the Pretense of Charity

A Closely Held Business

What’s a Kidney Worth

An Irresistible Force

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Ann Neumann is a contributing editor at The Revealer and Guernica magazine and a visiting scholar at The Center for Religion and Media, NYU. Neumann‘s book, The Good Death, will be published by Beacon Press in February 2016.

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