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Home » Europe

Diagnostic Imaging Europe. Vol. 26 No. 1
 

Interventional radiology finds new patients in Jehovah’s Witnesses

Religion rejects transfusions, accepts therapies that don't require blood or blood products

By Philip Ward | February 11, 2010

Radiologists from Boston Medical Center are using interventional techniques to treat bleeding Jehovah's Witness patients.

The Jehovah's Witness movement was established by Charles Russell in Pennsylvania in the 1870s and now has six million followers worldwide. Issues with blood transfusions were first described in the July 1945 edition of The Watchtower, the movement's official publication.

Followers believe ingestion of blood can result in loss of eternal life, eternal damnation, and excommunication from their congregation. Many also believe that individuals offering to transfuse blood are acting through the devil's influence.

Acceptable medical treatments for church members include most surgical/ interventional procedures and anesthesiologic blood conservation methods, as well as diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, synthetic oxygen therapeutics, nonblood volume expanders, pharmacologic agents that do not contain blood components or fractions such as vasoconstrictors, agents that enhance hematopoiesis, and recombinant products, said Dr. Nii-Kabu Kabutey, lead author of the Boston group's RSNA 2009 education exhibit.

Other procedures acceptable to the elders of Jehovah's Witness include apheresis, hemodialysis, plasma-derived fractions (immunoglobulins, vaccines, antivenins, albumin, cryoprecipitate), hemostatic products containing blood fractions (fibrin glue and/or sealant), and hemostatic bandages containing plasma fractions and thrombin sealants.

Many church members have problems finding a physician who will treat them in accordance with their beliefs, and they fear their beliefs will not be respected during a medical emergency. Conversely, some physicians think these beliefs are at odds with their duty to promote a patient's well-being, according to Kabutey.

Before a procedure, the Boston Medical Center team evaluates the patient's history of bleeding or previous hematologic or thrombotic disorders, plus the individual's family history in this area.

Team members then obtain a modified informed consent, aggressively treat anemia, work to minimize iatrogenic blood loss and the number of blood samples taken, and use pediatric tubes. They use various techniques to limit blood loss and reduce transfusion requirements, including meticulous hemostasis and use of closure devices to the puncture site, good manual compression at the puncture site, and reverse anticoagulation if clinically feasible.

After the procedure, further methods are used to reduce blood loss, such as close clinical follow-up, minimizing oxygen consumption, and maximizing oxygen saturation.

“Understanding the social and clinical challenges in the treatment of Jehovah's Witness patients is essential to provide quality care,” Kabutey said. “Proper preprocedural planning can improve the outcome of interventional procedures on bleeding patients.”

One of the group's success stories was a 57-year-old female Jehovah's Witness with an acute onset of brightred blood per rectum. A colonoscopy did not reveal any abnormal pathology. Embolization of the right colonic artery was successful, and the patient did not require a transfusion or surgical intervention.

In another case, a 33-year-old female JW presented acutely with postpartum hemorrhage. She refused a transfusion and wanted to avoid a hysterectomy. Bilateral embolization of uterine arteries was accomplished with Gelfoam. Her bleeding stopped after the procedure, and she did not require a hysterectomy.

 

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by Nii-Kabu Kabutey | February 23, 2010 5:15 PM EST

Thank you very much for the historical clarification and the most recent Jehovah's Witness census data.

Nii-Kabu Kabutey

by Ronald Day | February 20, 2010 4:51 PM EST

I believe that is misleading to say: "The Jehovah's Witness movement was established by Charles Russell."Russell was a non-sectarian who did not believe in authoritarian organization such as the Jehovah's Witnesses. The "Jehovah's Witnesses" organization came as a result of Joseph Rutherford after Russell died. By 1930, the majority of the earlier Bible Students movement had rejected Rutherford's new organization and its new doctrines, which meant that the original Bible Students movement was existing aside from Rutherford's organization, which led Rutherford to adopt the name "Jehovah's Witnesses" for his new organization in 1931.

Nor did the idea of rejecting blood transfusions originate
from Charles Taze Russell.

by Bobby Lamb | February 18, 2010 1:25 PM EST

This was a good story, thanks.  I need to point out one mistake.  You said there are 6 million Jehovah's Witnesses today.  The actual number is much higher.  The 2009 yearbook says there are 7,124,443 JWs.






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