Full Text of New Blood Video

by grey matters 19 Replies latest watchtower medical

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    The following is the full text of the new blood video, sent to me via a blast email this morning. I will post it one page at a time, as I am not sure what the character number limit is for one post.

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    NO BLOOD

    Medicine Meets
    the Challenge

    Narrator: Dorothy McPhee has a life-threatening

    medical problem. An artery that could burst at any

    time.—"The normal way of doing this operation is,

    generally through the abdomen, a long vertical

    incision . . . "

    Leslie is a young girl with a serious spinal

    deformity.—"The patient is a Jehovah's Witness, and

    in a procedure of this magnitude, it's unavoidable

    that some blood loss will occur.

    Both patients need surgery, yet, both patients have

    religious beliefs that preclude their accepting a

    blood transfusion. Medical science is now providing

    doctors with alternative strategies to treat

    successfully patients who, for various reasons avoid

    blood transfusions. These new strategies may soon

    benefit all patients.

    NO BLOOD
    Medicine Meets the Challenge

    At the dawn of the 21st century, society is becoming

    increasingly diverse. People everywhere are being

    exposed to different languages, customs, cultures,

    and religious beliefs. Adapting to these differences

    is a challenge to all strata of human society. It is

    a singular challenge for the medical community.

    Prof. Timothy W. Harding: "We're living in a

    pluralistic society, and the doctor has one set of

    values. But, he or she will meet patients who have

    their own values and their own position about certain

    issues."

    Eileen Yost, R.N: "There's a lot of different

    cultures out there, and they have entities specific

    to their own cultures, that we as health-care workers

    need to understand."

    Prof. Oliver Guillod: "I think the duty of physicians

    is not simply to preserve life, but the first and

    foremost duty of physicians is to respect the

    patient."

    Narrator: In the past the medical profession found it

    difficult, at times, to respect the health care need

    of one religious group, in particular—Jehovah's

    Witnesses. This was because of their avoidance of

    blood transfusions.

    Alexis: "That was the easiest decision, because there

    was. . . under no circumstances would I accept blood.

    . . "

    Jessica: "One thing I heard; he said: 'blood

    transfusion,' and immediately I said: 'No! No!' . . .

    "

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    Wayne: "I just couldn't live with myself if I turned

    my back on my beliefs, and my God, and . . . I wasn't

    going to accept a blood transfusion."

    Narrator: Their abstaining from blood transfusions

    was often misunderstood by the public.

    Prof. Roland Hetzer: "There was certainly a time,

    years back, when Jehovah's Witnesses were looked at

    by physicians, and especially surgeons, in a negative

    way."

    Jamie Pollard, R.N.: "I think that before I ever met

    a Jehovah's Witness, I had a certain mind-set, that

    they were maybe a religious fanatic-type person."

    Prof. Charles H. Baron: "Part of it, I'm sure, is

    prejudice, about a religious sect, which the

    physician, or the judge, or the lawyer, . . . about

    which they may know next to nothing."

    Gene Smalley—JW spokesman: "Á lot of people nowadays

    have heard of dangers, or diseases, that might be

    contracted from blood and blood transfusions. But

    frankly, for Jehovah's Witnesses, central to their

    avoiding blood transfusions, is because the Bible

    highlights the preciousness of blood."

    Eugene Rosam—JW spokesman: "It's a very clear

    statement, by the way. It isn't something that

    takes a lot of theological study to determine, or

    work out. It says very plainly in the Christian

    scriptures:
    "Abstain . . . from Blood."—Acts 15:20.

    Prof. Charles H. Baron: "From the point of view of

    someone who is not a believer, it seems an irrational

    act."

    Prof. Edward Keyserlingk: "For some people, it seems

    to be anti-medicine. It seems to be, somehow, putting

    the patient in jeopardy."

    Diane Mitchell C.C.M.: "I think that some of us,

    myself included, was under the impression that maybe

    Jehovah's Witnesses didn't want the best medical

    treatment, that they were sort of against medical

    care."

    Alec: "There's no question, it mattered to me whether

    she lived or died. I brought her to the hospital in

    the first place, to help her recover."

    Cynthia: "I didn't want her to die, and I don't think

    anybody wants that to happen."

    Dr. Mark E. Boyd: "It's not some sort of suicide

    pact that they want to enter into with you. They want

    to live, they want to have good health care, and I

    think that you can work with them."

    Diane Mitchell, C.C.M.: "I realized that they wanted

    the best medical health care, but they just wanted it

    without blood."

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    Prof. Edward Keyserlingk: "I think the effort has to

    be made to remove the perception that Jehovah's

    Witnesses are somehow in a category by themselves."

    Dr. Aryeh Shander: "Clearly, you can point to many

    religions, they all have one issue or another, with

    which you may or may not agree, but that's not the

    issue."

    Dr. Peter Carmel: "If this is a religious precept,

    this is not illogical stubbornness. This is a

    religious belief. And just as I respect the religious

    beliefs of many other religions, I think I have to

    respect that."

    THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE TREATMENT

    David C. Day, Q.C.: "All patients, as a general rule,

    have the right to receive treatment or to refuse to

    receive that treatment, after they've had full, open,

    and candid discussion with the treating physician.

    Prof. Oliver Guillod: "I believe that the basic

    element of patient's rights is the right of self-

    determination. That is, the right of any patient to

    decide what shall be done to his or her own body."

    Narrator: Patients' rights not withstanding, some

    have claimed that declining, what they say, is 'life

    -saving medical treatment,' is irrational.

    Prof. Timothy W. Harding: "It's wrong to equate a

    refusal of treatment with suicide, which is a

    conscious choice to end one's life."

    Prof. Edward Keyserlingk: "There is always a

    legitimate question about a patient's competence. But

    just the mere refusal of blood, in itself, is not any

    kind of such indication."

    Dr. Stephen M. Cohn: "I don't believe that refusal of

    treatment is irresponsible or irrational. I think

    that just because one person chooses to not to take

    this pill, or that fluid, this kind of solution, is

    their own personal choice."

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "We have patients who say that

    they don't want to be on a mechanical ventilator,

    they don't want a breathing tube."

    Dr. Mark E. Boyd: "It's an everyday even, for a

    patient who has a malignancy or cancer, to refuse

    some treatment of other. They don't want to have

    chemotherapy, they don't want to have radical

    surgery, so the idea that patient's refuse treatment,

    is something that I work with, not take it . . . I

    don't take it as a personal insult."

    Narrator: These facts are often obscured by news

    stories claiming that someone died because he refused

    a blood transfusion.

    Dr. Aryeh Shander: "To say that one has died because

    of refusal of blood, I think is a very general

    misleading statement."

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    Dr. Mark E. Boyd: "That's an oversimplification of

    the . . . of the tragic event."

    Dr. Peter Carmel: "It's rarely, if ever, the case

    that a patient refused a blood transfusion and

    therefore died."

    Dr. Aryeh Shander: "People die because of either a

    medical disease, or a consequence of trauma, or

    surgery where there has been complications."

    Dr. Hooshang Bolooki: "I can tell you I have done

    over 200 Jehovah's Witness patients. I have never

    lost a patient because I could not give the patient

    blood."

    Narrator: Why then does blood transfusion remain the

    standard treatment for serious blood loss?

    Dr. Peter Carmel: "I think that physicians have been

    brought up with the idea that blood is the 'gift of

    life,' and that inherently, blood is good for you."

    Dr. Avroy Fanaroff: "The refusal to accept a blood

    transfusion bothers and concerns many physicians

    because they're worried that without the transfusion,

    the well-being of the patient is jeopardized."

    Narrator: To appreciate fully why physicians feel

    this way, one needs to understand a little about

    blood and why transfusions are given.

    THE FLUID OF LIFE—BLOOD

    Blood circulates through the body by means of an

    amazingly intricate system of conduits called veins

    and arteries. Arteries carry oxygenated blood away

    from the heart, eventually branching into tiny

    vessels called capillaries. These deliver the oxygen

    -rich red blood cells to every part of the body.

    Nutrients and oxygen are exchanged for carbon dioxide

    and other wastes at the cellular level. Veins then

    transport the oxygen-depleted blood back to the heart

    which pumps it to the lungs. There the carbon dioxide

    is exchanged for oxygen and the cycle begins anew.

    This cycle is absolutely essential to life.

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "If there's no blood to bring

    the oxygen to the cells, the cell dies—the body dies!

    Narrator: When someone suffers severe blood loss,

    Doctors have two urgent priorities.

    Dr, Edwin A. Deitch: "The most critical immediate

    need is to stop the bleeding."

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "Everything takes 'backseat' to

    stopping the bleeding."

    Dr. Stephen M. Cohn: "And number 2, is to restore

    the volume within your system."

    Narrator: "What can happen when a patient looses too

    much blood volume

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    Dr, Edwin A. Deitch: "Then you don't deliver blood to

    the brain or the other organs and a person can die."

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "And what you need to do is

    restore volume, restore profusion, and restore

    oxygenation."

    Dr, Edwin A. Deitch: "A way of correcting that

    decrease in blood volume is by giving other fluids

    intravenously. This can be done using any one of a

    number of fluid types, and doesn't necessarily

    require blood."

    CHANGING ATTITUDES

    Narrator: Increasing numbers of patients are opting

    to avoid blood transfusions for personal reasons.

    Prof. Lawrence T. Goodnough: "If you've ever had a

    conversation with a patient the night before surgery,

    and you were to ask them if they had a preference,

    would they prefer to avoid a blood transfusion, the

    answer is always, 'Yes.'"

    Prof. Roland Hetzer: "I would say that today, at

    least 80 percent of the patients, would strongly

    favor not to have blood transfusions."

    Prof. Francesco Mercuriali: "Blood transfusion,

    traditionally considered a normal adjunct to surgery,

    presently is considered something that has to be

    avoided."

    Dr. Willem de Groot: "There are real risks as far as

    transfusions are concerned."

    Dr. Gerard A. Kaiser: "There are concerns about blood

    bore pathogens, and certainly the concern about

    AIDS."

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "It's a biological product. It

    can have diseases, etc. We screen for most of them,

    but there are some there we just don't know about."

    Prof. Neil Blumberg: "We've certainly seen some

    horrendous new diseases in the form of HIV come along

    that probably didn't exist in the past. Whether the

    next disease will come along in ten weeks, ten years,

    or a hundred years, nobody can say."

    Dr. Concha Lewand: "We have Hepatitis C, Hepatitis B,

    transmitted, and the social costs of that are very

    high."

    Dr. Todd K. Rosengart: "There are transfusion

    reactions that occur, they are very rare, but they

    can potentially dangerous or even life-threatening."

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "We could mix the blood up and

    cause a catastrophe. Patients have died and do die

    from getting the wrong blood."

    Prof. Donat R. Spahn: "It is interesting to realize

    now, that during the late 90s or early 2000s that the

    blood transfusion, to a certain extent, does not do

    what we always used blood transfusions for."

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    Prof. Neil Blumberg: "We've become persuaded, over

    the years, that many of the bad things that happen to

    patients after surgery, are in fact, not bad luck,

    are not a lack of surgical skills, but are in fact,

    the complications of transfusions."

    ALTERNATIVE STRATEGIES

    Narrator: These concerns have spurred a wide range of

    alternative strategies, treatments that are

    acceptable to many of Jehovah's Witnesses, an others

    who also choose to avoid blood transfusions.

    Alternative strategies can be grouped around four

    organizing principles.

    [Minimize Blood Loss;
    Conserve Red Blood Cells;
    Stimulate Blood Production;
    Recover Lost Blood]

    Prof. Donat R. Spahn: "That involves an aesthetic

    factor, it involves the use of certain substances,

    and certainly involves also the surgical technique."

    MINIMIZE BLOOD LOSS

    Prof. Johannes Scheele: "The most important technique

    to control bleeding is to avoid bleeding. . . . so

    that with less bleeding during surgery, the result of

    that is better, and the outcome is more likely to be

    smoother."

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "Careful surgery means

    preventing blood loss. Age is no factor. We have

    operated on newborns, we have operated on people in

    their 90s."

    Dr. Mark E. Boyd: "The surgeon who operates without

    losing large amounts of blood, is almost invariably a

    good and careful surgeon. One who loses large amounts

    of blood is most often, the reverse."

    Narrator: A variety of instruments are now available

    to help surgeons minimize bleeding.

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "There are strategies for inter

    -operatively using electrocautery instead of

    scalpels."

    Prof. Johannes Scheele: "If there is some bleeding

    persisting, there are coagulation techniques. The

    best of which is, at the moment, Argon-Beam

    Coagulator."

    Narrator: There are non-invasive tools that enable

    the surgeon to see inside the body, minimizing

    surgical incisions.

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "You can use drugs, topical

    application of different products that will help

    prevent blood loss."

    Prof. Roland Hetzer: "We have now, several methods

    available, like the 'fibrin glue' . . .

    Narrator: Fibrin glue made from blood fractions

    stimulates coagulation upon contact.

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    Prof. Johannes Scheele: "The fibrin tissue adhesive

    is certainly very, very useful because it does not

    harm the tissue."

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "In a Jehovah's Witness, where

    the blood loss is so, so, so critical, I think you

    have to be very, extremely meticulous not to lose

    even a drop of blood."

    CONSERVE RED BLOOD CELLS

    Dr. Peter Carmel: "There are new technologies of

    hemodilution and reinfusion, that make the operation

    easier, and which are acceptable to people who have a

    religious precept against blood transfusion."

    Dr. Linda Shehling: "The principles of hemodilution,

    in terms of reduction of blood loss, are really quite

    simple."

    Dr. Concha Lewand: "Basically, we do the closed

    circuit on the patient. We draw off blood from the

    patient—keep it in contact with the patient—and

    substitute it with fluids."

    Prof. Donat R. Spahn: "That results in a diluted

    blood, and therefore, the patient looses only diluted

    blood, rather than native, or concentrated blood."

    Dr. Linda Shehling: "When the patient bleeds

    interoperatively, the red cell lose is less."

    Dr. Herbert Dardik: "It would be like taking a quart

    of milk and turning it. . . or adding water so that

    you have 3 gallons of it now, but the original quart

    is still in there. But if you were to spill it into

    something, it would be a lot of water—and a fraction

    of the milk—then at the end, you get rid of the

    water, and then you're back where you started."

    Dr. Aryeh Shander: "And we use that routinely in

    this institution, especially for those patients who

    have anticipated significant blood loss."

    Dr. Concha Lewand: "I think that's nowadays,

    besides—I think that for Jehovah's Witnesses it’s a

    pretty good standard of care for large volume loss

    surgery."

    RECOVER LOST BLOOD

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "If we do loose blood, this

    is the kind of case where we'll use a cell saver. We

    will suction up any blood that's lost—we wash it, we

    clean it, we process it, we filter it—and then we'll

    give it back to you."

    Prof. Donat R. Spahn: "Cell salvage is a very

    important technique, because when you use cell

    salvage, the blood lost by the surgeon is not lost

    for the patient."

    Prof. Johannes Scheele: "In any trauma patient with a

    significant blood loss, I would, always, prepare the

    cell saver system."

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    STIMULATE BLOOD PRODUCTION

    Narrator: "A key element in stimulating the body's

    ability to replenish its own blood supply is a

    hormone called erythropoetin.

    Dr. Blair Siefert: "Erythropoetin is a natural

    substance. It is formed in the kidneys, other organs

    as well, but primarily the kidney, to help our bone

    marrows to form the red blood cells that are going to

    carry our oxygen."

    Narrator: Blood cell production takes place primarily

    in the sternum, the ribs, the vertebra, and the

    pelvis. Recombinant Erythropoetin boosts the body's

    natural production of red blood cells.

    Dr. Nicholas Namais: "So if I know the patient is

    going to be in the hospital a long time, I may start

    them on some recombinant erythropoetin so they can

    start building up their own blood storage."

    Prof. Francesco Mercuriali: "This can be a very cost

    effective strategy, to reuse the utilization of

    allergenic blood transfusion."

    Dr. Richard K. Spence: "One of the most exciting

    things about this whole field, is that the majority

    of things that we talk about is within the reach of

    physicians and hospitals around the world."

    Dr. Peter Carmel: "There are now available,

    techniques in almost every sub-specialty of surgery

    and medicine that allow bloodless treatment."

    Major Spry—JW spokesman: "Alternatives, like any

    other therapy, are not necessarily, free from risk.

    So a patient, a Witness patient in particular, may

    want to become informed about the benefits and the

    risks that are associated with any particular

    treatment."

    Dr, Edwin A. Deitch: "They should be a prudent

    consumer."

    Narrator: How effective are these alternative

    strategies in helping doctors treat patients who do

    not want blood transfusions?

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    CASE HISTORIES

    Leslie Lacks had just begun elementary school when it

    became apparent that she had a degenerating spinal

    deformity. Doctors diagnosed Leslie's condition as a

    severe form of Scoliosis.

    Dr. Tarek Mardam-Bey: "Scoliosis is a curvature of

    the spine, so we have to correct it as much as the

    spine's flexibility allows us."

    Narrator: After a brace failed to correct her

    condition, doctors recommended an extensive surgical

    procedure.

    Dr. Tarek Mardam-Bey: "We used essentially a series

    of hooks and metal rods made out of stainless steel,

    that are implanted in the patient's back, and are

    used essentially to distract the spine and achieve

    alignment."

    Narrator: The Lacks wanted the surgery performed

    without a blood transfusion. So they found a surgical

    team that had experience using bloodless techniques.

    Before the surgery, Leslie's doctors boosted her

    blood through the use of iron and recombinant

    erythropoetin.

    Dr. Tarek Mardam-Bey: "So it was essential that we do

    the surgery without excessive blood loss. The way

    that we were able to achieve this is using two

    techniques basically. One of them is called the cell

    saver. The other technique we used is called

    hemodilution. It is safer in that, it's the patient's

    own blood and its has remained in continuous

    circulation with the patient, so there's no chance

    for contamination or blood transmitted diseases.

    Narrator: The surgery was a success, and no blood

    transfusion was administered! Within days, Leslie was

    up and walking.

    Bobbie Lacks: "She's so happy. She can completely

    stand, now she says, 'Mommy, I'm almost as tall as

    you now!'

    Narrator: Although Leslie will have to wear a brace

    for a while—doctors are confident she will lead a

    normal life.

    Leslie Lacks: "I'd like to skate, and skateboard,

    maybe learn how to snowboard, . . .stuff like that!"

    Narrator: Sometimes alternative strategies involve

    new surgical techniques to reduce blood loss in

    patients that don't want a transfusion. 75 year-old

    Dorothy McPhee suffered an abdominal aortic aneurysm,

    a life threatening condition, that traditionally

    requires extensive surgery.

    Dr. Herbert Dardik: "The normal way of doing this

    operation is, generally through the abdomen, a long

    vertical incision from the lower chest down to the

    pubic area, having to work around and behind the

    entire intestinal tract. Hospitalization ranging—at

    best, days, 4 or 5 days, to averaging a week or even

    more—presuming that there are no operative

    complications."

    Narrator: Since Dorothy is one of Jehovah's

    Witnesses, her physicians used a surgical technique

    that minimizes bleeding.

    Dr. Herbert Dardik: "What we did today is called

    endovascular aortic surgery. Essentially that's;

    Endo—meaning we are working within the artery.

    Through that artery we place our catheters, our

    wires, all the instruments that we steal right up to

    where the aneurysm is. And then we can visualize the

    aneurysm by doing coroscopy, x-ray technology.

    Narrator: Dorothy's doctors inserted a wire mesh

    called a stint, and were thus able to repair her

    aorta without a large surgical incision that would

    have caused a lot of bleeding.

    Dr. Herbert Dardik: "A small incision through the

    groin, all the manipulation through that—a virtually

    pain-free, complication-free, in post-operative, of

    course—home, generally in 24-hours—so, everybody's a

    winner!

    Dorothy McPhee: "I feel fine! I never would have

    believed it, but I do!"

    Narrator: Two days after her surgery, Dorothy was

    sent home. She recovered nicely!

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