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Jehovah's Witnesses do not refuse medical intervention. We seek the highest quality medical care available for ourselves and our loved ones. The only treatment we refuse is that involving transfusions of whole blood or its major componants into our bodies. This is based on Acts 15:28, 29 and other related passages in the Holy Bible. Although our refusal is Bible based, we have benefitted physically from this stand as well. Our surgeons are thus more careful, and we often recover more quickly from surgery than others who have the same surgery with blood transfusions. Many who are not Witnesses have also benefitted from our stand. Link below to more details.

Jehovah's Witnesses do not refuse medical intervention. We seek the highest quality medical care available for ourselves and our loved ones. The only treatment we refuse is that involving transfusions of whole blood or its major componants into our bodies. This is based on Acts 15:28, 29 and other related passages in the Holy Bible. Although our refusal is Bible based, we have benefitted physically from this stand as well. Our surgeons are thus more careful, and we often recover more quickly from surgery than others who have the same surgery with blood transfusions. Many who are not Witnesses have also benefitted from our stand. Link below to more details.

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15y ago

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What are some movies about the Jehovahs Witnesses and their controversial Blood doctrines?

I would recommend the video "No Blood - Medicine Meets the Challenge". Ask any of Jehovah's Witnesses to get it for you when they call at your door.


What did Charles Drew do for society?

Charles Drew expanded the knowledge of blood banking and blood tranfusions.


What did Charles Drew do to get recognized?

Charles Drew expanded the knowledge of blood banking and blood tranfusions.


How did Charles Drew help others?

Charles Drew expanded the knowledge in the Blood Banking and blood tranfusions.


When hospitalized are there any special procedures for Jehovahs witnesses?

Jehovah's Witenesses do not receive blood transfusions, for religious reasons. Depending therefore, on the reason for their hospitalization, various nonblood fluids volume expanders might be adminitstered when one might otherwise have been given blood. Other than that, Jehovah's witnesses, would expect the same level of care, consultation rights and legal protection as any other patient when in hospital.


How was dr Charles Drew importanat?

Charles Drew helped expand the knowledge of blood banking and blood tranfusions.


Who were Charles Richard Drew?

Charles Drew was a medical doctor that expanded the knowledge of blood banking and blood tranfusions.


Why does jehovas don't take blood transfusion?

"Jehovah's Witnesses" is what we are called. And we believe blood is sacred and should not be given away. However, some Jehovah's Witnesses do give and receive blood. It is a moral problem.


Which group does not allow blood transfusions because they believe that taking blood into the body is morally wrong?

The group is know as "Jehovah's Witnesses". They believe that receiving blood transfusions are the same as drinking blood, which is stickily forbidden in the old testament law and repeated in the new testament book of Acts where Gentile believers were to "they keep themselves from things offered to idols, and from blood, and from strangled, and from fornication." The problem comes down to whither or not transfusions are drinking blood or not.


How was it scriptural for the Watchtower to allow blood transfusions for Bulgarian Jehovahs Witnesses in 1998 after signing a contract with Bulgaria before the European Commission for Human Rights?

I believe that you have been misinformed. Please, consider your source before making false accusations on the Witnesses. There is no answer to your question.


Why do Jehovah's disallow blood tranfusions?

We follow the command at Acts 15:29, which is to abstain from blood. That means we avoid consuming or taking in any blood to our bodies.


What is the difference between a spoken language difference and a cultural difference?

A spoken language difference is simply when you and another person (say, a patient) do not speak the same language. A cultural difference is where something that is accepted in your culture is not acceptable in another (blood tranfusions are not accepted by Jehovah's Witnesses, for example).