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Volumn 26, Issue 5, 2000, Pages 375-380
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Why some Jehovah's witnesses accept blood and conscientiously reject official watchtower society blood policy
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NONE
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Author keywords
Autonomy; Blood transfusion; Jehovah's Witnesses; Watchtower
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Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
AUTHORITY;
BLOOD;
BLOOD COMPONENT;
BLOOD TRANSFUSION;
CONFIDENTIALITY;
CONSCIENCE;
CONTROLLED STUDY;
FEMALE;
HUMAN;
HUMAN RIGHTS;
LITERATURE;
MALE;
PATIENT ATTITUDE;
PHILOSOPHY;
POLICY;
PRACTICE GUIDELINE;
RELIGIOUS GROUP;
SOCIAL SUPPORT;
STANDARDIZATION;
DISSENT;
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES;
PROFESSIONAL PATIENT RELATIONSHIP;
RELIGIOUS APPROACH;
RISKS AND BENEFITS;
WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY;
BLOOD TRANSFUSION;
CHILD;
CHRISTIANITY;
DECISION MAKING;
DISSENT AND DISPUTES;
ETHICS, MEDICAL;
FREEDOM;
HUMANS;
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES;
ORGANIZATIONAL POLICY;
PATIENT PARTICIPATION;
RELIGION AND MEDICINE;
RISK ASSESSMENT;
SOCIETIES;
TREATMENT REFUSAL;
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EID: 0033786553
PISSN: 03066800
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1136/jme.26.5.375 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (46)
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References (23)
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