A recent article in the NJ Jewish Standard. . .
The boy was 17 years old and he urgently needed an operation.
As a Jehovah’s Witness, however, he would rather die than receive a blood transfusion, believing it to be a transgression of the biblical prohibition against eating blood. His parents, also pious members of the religious group, agreed with him.
The doctors of the UCLA Medical Center, however, would not agree to perform a blood-free operation. They were not willing to risk losing a patient’s life because of his religious beliefs.
As a member of the medical center’s ethics committee, Rabbi Elliot Dorff was among those consulted.
Dorff, Conservative Judaism’s leading expert on medical ethics and chairman of the Rabbinical Assembly’s Committee on Jewish Law and Standards (CJLS), says that under halachah, or Jewish law, the case would be open-and-shut.
First, halachah does not consider a blood transfusion to be at all akin to the forbidden act of eating blood. Secondly, even eating blood would be permitted under Jewish law to save a life.
American law, however, presented the UCLA Medical Center with a more complicated picture. An adult has the legal right to refuse medical treatment. The patient, however, was a minor. And parents do not have the right to refuse medical treatment on behalf of their children.
This case was resolved by sending the patient to a hospital, affiliated with Jehovah’s Witnesses, that was able to offer a blood-free operation — and would be willing to let the patient die if necessary.
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http://www.jstandard.com/content/item/how_judaism_differs_in_life-death_issues/22840