Ruling sought on transfusion for baby of Jehovah's Witness

by Matty 12 Replies latest social current

  • Matty
    Matty

    Ruling sought on transfusion for baby of Jehovah's Witness



    Ruling sought on transfusion for baby of Jehovah's Witness

    By Cy Ryan

    CARSON CITY -- The Nevada Supreme Court has been asked to decide if Valley Hospital Medical Center in Las Vegas was wrong in giving a blood transfusion to a critically ill baby against the religious beliefs of the baby's parents, who are Jehovah's Witnesses.

    Nancy Savage, attorney for the hospital, told the court Thursday that an emergency situation existed for the premature infant that was born weighing 2 pounds, 11 ounces.

    It administered a blood transfusion and then asked a judge if the hospital could be named temporary guardian of the child and his twin brother so they might administer further blood transfusions.

    Jason and Rebecca Soto refused to give permission for the transfusion and were never notified the hospital was going to court to get an ex-parte order giving it temporary guardianship over the two children.

    Donald Ridley, attorney for the Sotos, argued the hospital had no right to seek a guardianship.

    "These kids had guardians," he said. "The issue was making the appropriate decision for health care."

    Ridley, of Pawling, N. Y., said the hospital, if it was concerned, should have notified Child Protective Services, which could have acted as a "buffer" between the hospital and the parents. The twins, born in June 2001, are now doing fine, the court was told.

    The Christian Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses filed a friend of the court brief that said the religion has no objections to conventional medicine and they do not believe in or practice faith healing. Attorney Jerry Mowbray said the Witnesses obey a scriptural directive to "Keep abstaining from blood."

    Mowbray, in his brief, urged the court to show "respect for parental child rearing authority and for religious freedom."

    Rebecca Soto, the mother, checked into the hospital nearly a month before the birth, which was considered high risk. One of the twins weighed 4 pounds, 13 ounces at birth; the smaller twin was born apparently stillborn but later recovered a heartbeat.

    The hospital decided the smaller baby needed a transfusion; the parents believed a transfusion was not needed.

    After the transfusion was performed, the hospital filed a court petition asking to be named temporary guardian of both children, which was granted.

    The Sotos were not notified until the next day of the court order.

    Two days later Family Court Judge Gerald Hardcastle agreed to extend the hospital's temporary guardianship of the smaller boy for 30 days but did not allow it for the bigger boy. No transfusions were given during the 30 days. The Sotos were represented at that hearing.

    Ridley argued that the hospital received the guardianship after the transfusion to protect itself from liability.

    Savage said this was an emergency situation and "that's why the hospital got the guardianship."

  • Matty
    Matty

    All I can say about the matter is - what an incredible waste of court time. The Valley Hospital Medical Center did a great job, and here we have the Witnesses whining away, trying to assemble a test case, so that in the future they will be able to allow babies to die. Sickening.

  • sf
    sf

    ATS -- Sade 76 (4): 1336-a
    ... I am grateful for the comments of Donald Ridley, legal counsel for the Christian
    Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and respect his organization’s point ...
    ats.ctsnetjournals.org/cgi/content/full/76/4/1336-a - Similar pages

    This RELIGIOUS FREEDOM bullkrap has got to cease. So many kids are doomed if it doesn't. So many.

    Why does the Watchtower care so much if this baby gets blood? What is the big deal? Seriously. I never understood this policy. Never will!

    (and please, someone, answer my questions, if you can)

    sKally

  • sf
    sf

    ...trying to assemble a test case, so that in the future they will be able to allow babies to die. Sickening.

    Yes, sick, sick, sick.

    ===============

    TED JARACZ:

    The straw is about to break the camels back.

    sKally

  • sf
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    Photo enlarged:

  • Cassiline
    Cassiline
    The resort's attorneys claim the policy did not impermissibly discriminate against pregnant cocktail waitresses, because everyone in that position was required to have a sexy and glamorous appearance.


    If it is the same Soto then it seems she is suing for the reasons JW's should not sue over, suing over being fired for not being sexy enough just goes against everything the JW's teach IMO. They are not to care if they are sexy or not.

    Your questions sKally about blood can only be answered by those who have been brain washed enough to believe that God would want their children to die long excruciating deaths.

    Cassi

  • Simon
    Simon

    and working in a casino in the first place? That isn't 'witness work' !

    May not be her though.

  • Panda
    Panda

    This shows how the rules are shuffled depending on the place..In Wisconsin you'd get the boot for cocktail waitressing, in LasVegas it's ok, I mean what other jobs are there; like the Malawi/Mexico politico cards. Malawis died, Mexicans can use bribes because it's cultural! dubs in the EU have been using blood for quite some time, in the US I watched 2 close friends die for rejecting blood in an emergency.

    That little premie twin would've died w/o the tiny bit of blood he was given. They might as well leave the borg now because they will be undesirable playmates for other dub kids. They broke the insane blood non-law so they'll be persecuted ad nauseum. Too bad they can't take the kids away permanently.

  • barry
    barry

    The kid may not want to be a JW when it grows up so whyshoud it be subject to JW ruling. Barry

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