Jehovah’s Witnesses has announced a significant update to its long-standing policy on blood transfusions, allowing members to undergo medical procedures involving their own stored blood while maintaining restrictions on receiving blood from others.
The policy shift permits adherents to have their blood removed, preserved, and later reinfused during planned medical procedures such as surgeries. This adjustment marks a notable development in the group’s medical guidelines, which have historically prohibited all forms of blood transfusion based on doctrinal interpretations.
The change was communicated by Gerrit Lösch, a member of the organization’s governing body, who emphasized personal responsibility in medical decision-making. “Each Christian must decide for himself how his blood will be used in medical and surgical care,” he said, signaling a degree of individual discretion within the revised framework.
Despite the update, the group reiterated that its core belief regarding the sanctity of blood remains unchanged. Members are still forbidden from accepting transfusions involving donor blood, a position rooted in the group’s interpretation of biblical teachings from both the Old and New Testaments, which they say instruct believers to abstain from blood.
The policy revision has drawn mixed reactions. While some observers view it as a step toward greater flexibility, critics including former members argue that it does not go far enough. They contend that the continued prohibition on donor blood could still place adherents at risk in emergency medical situations requiring immediate transfusions.
The issue has also intersected with legal and ethical debates. In a recent case in Edinburgh, a court ruled that doctors could administer a blood transfusion to a 14-year-old Jehovah’s Witness if necessary to save her life following surgery. The teenager had declined consent on religious grounds, but the court determined that her best interests justified overriding her decision.
Jehovah’s Witnesses, known globally for their evangelism and distinct doctrines, number approximately nine million members worldwide, including about 144,000 in the United Kingdom

