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“Marvin, just wondering how many JWS have died for not taking a BTs under your own beliefs and estimates?”
Finkelstein,
At least 50,000 between the years 1961 and 2011.
“If you are willing to answer a few more questions from me, how long did the study follow these patients? I know it was a ten year study, but for each patient in the study, how long did they track mortality? For example, if a patient who took a transfusion died six months later of cancer, was that death counted in the mortality statistics?”
I’d have to go back re-read the article but I think it covered the period of hospitalization.
“What I am getting at is that the study was to determine the cost benefit of transfusions. If a patient took a transfusion lived, then died later of their condition, there would have been a cost benefit for the short term, and the patient would be glad to have extended their life by those months, but the transfusion would not alter the outcome of their disease in the long run.
“So if a Jehovah's Witness refused the transfusion, and so died sooner rather than later of their underlying condition, can you really attribute that death to the Watchtower?”
Based on the above I’d say this is a non-factor. I’ll go back and check the article later.
“Again, you're missing the point and again I think it's so you can skip what I'm saying. I'm not saying these are "extra" deaths *not* included in the other ones, I'm demonstrating what the NUMBERS equate to and what the likelyhood should be of us all being personally aquainted with someone who dies from refusing blood.”
Simon,
Please stop insulting me with insinuation that I’m intentionally ignoring something you’re trying to communicate. I’M NOT!!!
Has it occurred that maybe you’re doing a poor job communicating to me?
Now, back to the subject, we have every reason to think the numbers I’m talking about (50,000) are scattered within the causes of death on your chart because that what study after study tells us on select patient presentations. Look up death rates for heart patients with Hb < 5 g dL who refuse blood. The figures are staggering! But when these patients die the cause of death is usually heart disease. Look up death rates for obstetric patients who refuse blood. The figures are staggering. But when these patients die the cause of death is usually listed as obstetric hemorrhage. Look up death rates for cancer patients who refuse blood. The figures are staggering. But when these patients die the cause of death is usually listed as some type of cancer. I can keep on going. Any patient presentation where transfusion of some Watchtower forbidden blood product comprises a substantial treatment modality we find mortality statistics shooting through the roof yet causes of death do not reflect the culprit.
All these incidents add up, and they add up a lot faster than folks comprehend because of distribution of morbidities and population.
“From your figures, for every KH of 100 people then 3+ of them will die from refusing blood.”
Eventually all 100 will die. (Not said sarcastically) The factor we’re talking about is whether refusal of some Watchtower forbidden blood product causes a premature death, and if so how many. In my neck of the woods most of the 100 will die over age 70 and by that time there’ll all have plenty of comorbidities and have suffered many throughout their life. Heart disease. Cancer. You name it. Each of these presents an increased risk factor for JWs somewhere in the world. Each of them, and each time they occur during one person’s life. When we layer this risk factor onto the 100 for each instance of a comorbidity it’s easy to conclude at least 3 of the 100 will suffer premature death due to refusing blood.
That’s how the number of preventable deaths gets hidden in the math. Statistically we can assign these deaths only by retrospective statistical analysis. But from a purely observational perspective there’s an even bigger reason why it seems counterintuitive to think 3 of the 100 died from refusing blood: because in the world of JWs even with a death is directly attributable to blood refusal its glossed over with a “we can’t say for sure what caused his death” mentality. This does not begin to address deaths that are caused secondarily by refusal of blood. JWs and novices close to JWs don’t see these deaths because they are not readily apparent for what they are and the community dismisses many incidents that are obvious.
Marvin Shilmer