Archive

Archive for September 4, 2011

Taking Care of the Dying Jehovah’s Witness

September 4, 2011 65 comments

This month I started a fellowship that predominantly involves taking care of women with cancer.  Through surgery, chemotherapy, and other medications we do our best to cure or hold back malignancies of many kinds.  In these past weeks, I have taken care of several patients who are Jehovah Witnesses, an experience that has been quite interesting.

In most cases, what religion a person subscribes to has little to no impact on their clinical outcome.  We have an exception, however, when it comes to a Jehovah’s Witness with cancer.  JHW patients to a rule will not accept blood products of any kind, which greatly limits their ability to be effectively treated for cancer.  In some cases they cannot have surgery because the surgery they need is unsafe without the possibility of blood transfusion.  In some cases they cannot take chemotherapy because blood transfusion is required to survive the associated myelosuppression.  As surgery and chemotherapy are our two best treatments, they are at a major disadvantage.

When I was a resident, I had a pretty hard opinion about this.  I heard a lot of different view on the topic, but the position of one of my attendings resonated best with me.  He felt that his job as a physician was to protect the health of his patients, and that if a JHW was dying in front of him he was going to transfuse them whether they liked it or not.  He was quite clear about this upfront, and told JHW patients that if they were not happy about this they should find another doctor.  He even arranged for attending coverage for emergent issues if need be.  He felt that the preventable death of a patient was an emotional trauma he didn’t want to be exposed to, almost as if the patient, through refusal of blood, was exposing him to unnecessary emotional violence.  While this was a very hard line, I respected the boldness of  it, and that he was being true to his internal values.  I held a similar feeling for the first few years of my attendinghood, though I never had to test it until my third year out of residency.

Read more…

%d bloggers like this: