Clinical Guidance & Bioethical Analysis
Healthcare professionals treating Jehovah’s Witness patients frequently encounter complex intersections of medical necessity, religious conviction, and institutional policy. This section addresses the unique clinical and bioethical challenges that arise in these scenarios, particularly concerning the protection of pediatric patients and the establishment of genuine informed consent.
The Challenge of Doctrinal Fluidity
Physicians are routinely challenged not only by the informational restrictions placed upon their patients, but by the systemic doctrinal fluidity of the Watchtower Society’s blood policy. Because the institutional directives regarding acceptable blood fractions and medical procedures are constantly shifting, assessing true patient comprehension is a critical clinical hurdle.
Within this portal, medical professionals will find evidence-based tools and qualitative data designed to facilitate transparent physician-patient dialogue. These resources are specifically tailored to help you navigate the presence of Hospital Liaison Committees (HLCs), mitigate institutional coercion, and ensure your patients are equipped to make fully autonomous, uncoerced healthcare choices.
Peer-Reviewed Literature & Bioethical Analysis
The following peer-reviewed studies and commentaries, primarily authored or introduced by AJWRB members, represent seminal literature in modern clinical bioethics regarding patient autonomy and blood policies.
- Why some Jehovah’s Witnesses accept blood and conscientiously reject official Watchtower Society blood policy – Lee Elder / Journal of Medical Ethics
- Refusal of potentially life-saving blood transfusions by Jehovah’s Witnesses: should doctors explain that not all JWs think it’s religiously required? – Raanan Gillon, Editor / Journal of Medical Ethics
- Medical confidentiality and the protection of Jehovah’s Witnesses’ autonomous refusal of blood – Osamu Muramoto / Journal of Medical Ethics
- Bioethical aspects of the recent changes in the policy of refusal of blood by Jehovah’s Witnesses – Osamu Muramoto / British Medical Journal
- Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah’s Witnesses: Part 1. Should bioethical deliberation consider dissidents’ views? – Osamu Muramoto / Journal of Medical Ethics
- Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah’s Witnesses: Part 2. A novel approach based on rational non-interventional paternalism – Osamu Muramoto / Journal of Medical Ethics
- Bioethics of the refusal of blood by Jehovah’s Witnesses: Part 3. A proposal for a don’t-ask-don’t-tell policy – Osamu Muramoto / Journal of Medical Ethics
Clinical Guides & Resources
- Navigating Blood Refusal: A Clinical Guide to Jehovah’s Witness Patients and Watchtower Policy
- Evaluating Transfusion Risk: Clinical Reality vs. Organizational Narrative
- The Watchtower Blood Map
- When Belief Meets Survival: Understanding the Psychological Dynamics of Blood Refusal
- The 2026 Autologous Pivot: A Victory for Conscience, a Failure of Accountability
- Straight from the Doctor
- Risks of Avoiding Necessary Blood Transfusions
Legal Liability & Informed Consent
- Institutional Messaging and the Complication of Informed Consent
- The Evolution of the Advance Medical Directive (Blood Card) and Implications for Informed Consent
- Jehovah’s Witnesses, Blood Transfusions, and the Tort of Misrepresentation
- Agency Law and the Watchtower Society
- Blood Transfusion: Letter of Understanding
- Jehovah’s Witness Girl Saved by Court
Doctrinal Fluidity & Institutional History
- Historical Precedents in Medical Refusal: The Watchtower Vaccination Ban (1921–1952)
- Organ Transplants: The 1967–1980 Prohibition and Reversal
- Watchtower Policy on Vaccination
- Inside the Hospital Liaison Committee: A Former Chairman’s Perspective on Institutional Coercion
- Theological Fluidity: A Scriptural and Historical Analysis of Blood Fractions
- Watchtower Blood Policy Changes – A Timeline
- Primary Source Archive: Institutional Directives
- The Watchtower’s Medical Expert