Here is one person's blog entry on the topic:
http://children.safepassagefoundation.org/archives/2007/01/dont_martyr_the.html
Don't martyr these infants
Calgary Herald
http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/
news/theeditorialpage/story.html?id=
d2588646-bb3b-4f9b-b9ed-b573a4439c28
Parents' objections shouldn't stop transfusions for sextuplets
Thursday, January 11, 2007
If the sextuplets born severely prematurely at B.C. Women's Hospital need blood transfusions, they should be made wards of the province and transfused over the objections of their Jehovah's Witness parents.
Jehovah's Witnesses base their objection to transfusions on Acts 15:29, with its command to "abstain from blood." As much as they are entitled to hold such a belief, when it conflicts with human rights, the latter must prevail. The sextuplets may require an infusion of red cells that their own immature organs may not be able to provide. Declining to do so could lead to the infants' deaths, and this is where the state has a moral duty to step in.
Adult Jehovah's Witnesses have every right to refuse transfusions for themselves. They do not have a right to deny health care to others. While parents are entitled to make decisions for their children, the line must be drawn when those decisions endanger the children's lives.
Most recently, this precept was tested in the case of Calgary's Bethany Hughes, a 16-year-old Jehovah's Witness suffering from acute myeloid leukemia. She was transfused against her and her mother's wishes, after her father asked a court to intervene. Sadly, Bethany died because her overall treatment, including chemotherapy, failed to halt the cancer.
According to the U.S. National Cancer Institute, acute myeloid leukemia causes a reduction in red blood cells, hence the need for transfusions as part of a treatment protocol.
The battleground between religion and health care is strewn with bitter court cases. In 1993, a Minnesota court ruled the Christian Science church had to pay $9 million US in damages after an 11-year-old boy died from untreated diabetes, after his parents had chosen prayer over medical care. In a similar case, The Lancet reports that British Rastafarian parents were found guilty of manslaughter after refusing insulin for their diabetic daughter.
In a 1998 report on child fatalities from religion-motivated medical neglect, Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, quoted a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the matter: "The right to practise religion freely does not include the liberty to expose the community or child to communicable disease, or the latter to ill health or death. . . . Parents may be free to become martyrs themselves. But it does not follow they are free, in identical circumstances, to make martyrs of their children before they have reached the age of full and legal discretion."
Nor are Jehovah's Witnesses in agreement about the blood taboo. A group called Associated Jehovah's Witnesses for Reform on Blood, notes that the Watchtower Society permits use of fractions of plasma, platelets, red and white cells, but not the whole product itself.
In June 2000, the Society declared that fractionated blood components were permitted and left it up to the individual to decide if a particular procedure violated the taboo. The AJWRB also says Witnesses who do accept transfusions won't be disfellowshipped.
A 1995 article in the Cancer Control Journal reports that "most Jehovah's Witness parents permitted transfusions for their minor children." Parents must never be allowed to risk their children's lives. The sextuplets need intensive care and intervention if they are to survive. If that includes transfusions, the province should ensure they get them.
Posted by Perry at January 11, 2007 02:00 PM