On April 23, 2026, a woman in Shiga Prefecture filed a 3.3 million yen lawsuit against Shiga University of Medical Science (滋賀医科大学) in the Otsu District Court, the Kyoto Shimbun reported. According to her complaint, the university hospital refused to perform her cataract surgery after learning she is a Jehovah’s Witness, an affiliation that under church doctrine means she would not consent to a blood transfusion in any circumstances.
Cataract surgery does not normally require transfusion, but Japanese hospitals routinely require patients to sign a consent form authorizing emergency transfusion as a condition of surgery, in case of unexpected complications. Patients who decline to sign are commonly turned away. The lawsuit hinges on whether refusing surgery on this basis amounts to religious discrimination, or whether it falls within the hospital’s discretion to refuse care for what Japanese medical law calls ‘just cause’ (正当な理由).
Religious accommodation in public-facing institutions is an increasingly visible debate in Japan, against a broader backdrop of controversies around the Unification Church and other religious groups. Public reaction to this case maps less onto a freedom-of-religion frame than onto a contract frame: commenters argue that asking the hospital to operate under conditions it has refused is asking the wrong party to bear the risk.
say the hospital was right
has no merit
The largest single bloc of opinion treats the hospital’s refusal as a defensible risk-management decision. Even patients and doctors who responded say that a hospital declining a high-stakes procedure on a patient who has pre-refused emergency intervention is following the same logic as any other high-risk surgical case.
One Yahoo commenter, identifying as the head of a hospital that does accept JW patients with explicit liability waivers, points out that this case would likely have been resolved with a similar arrangement at his own institution, but that mandating that approach across all hospitals is a different matter.
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A large overlapping group calls the suit itself unreasonable. Several commenters with apparent legal background reference Supreme Court precedent recognizing transfusion refusal as a personal-rights matter, but argue that the same precedent does not obligate a hospital to operate under conditions it considers unsafe. The retroactive argument that ‘no transfusion was actually needed’ is widely rejected as outcome-based reasoning.
The most-liked X reply, with nearly 7,000 likes, summarizes the view bluntly: framing the refusal as religious discrimination rather than as the hospital saying no to her conditions is, in the commenter’s words, ‘frankly stupid.’
A persistent thread criticizes the religion itself, calling Jehovah’s Witnesses a cult and arguing that the lawsuit reveals what the commenters see as opportunism, demanding modern medicine while refusing one of its standard preconditions. Older commenters reference past Japanese cases in which JW children died after parents refused transfusions on their behalf, a memory that visibly shapes public skepticism.
Several commenters extend the critique further, framing this lawsuit as part of a broader pattern in which religious minorities in Japan are seen as demanding accommodations from public institutions, with parallels drawn to halal food in school lunches and other accommodation debates currently in the news.
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Medical and former-medical commenters explain the structural reason hospitals require pre-surgical transfusion consent: even procedures that almost never need transfusion still require the option to be available, and an institution that allows exceptions sets up its surgeons for liability if anything goes wrong.
Multiple commenters note that the doctrine of ‘just cause’ (正当な理由) has long been interpreted to cover exactly this scenario, and that the result is that JW patients in Japan have for decades navigated a patchwork of hospitals that will or will not work with them, rather than a uniform right of access.
A constructive minority argues that the JW community should respond to repeated cases like this by funding hospitals that operate explicitly without transfusion. The third-most-liked X reply, with 3,600 likes, frames it as an obvious solution: ‘They should just build a hospital that provides medicine in line with Jehovah’s teaching.’
Skeptics within the same theme point out that any such institution would face severe staffing and demographic constraints, given the small and shrinking JW population in Japan, but the underlying logic is treated as sound.
A final cluster expresses general doubt without taking a strong side, often noting that the facts of what the doctor actually said are not yet public and that the trial may produce a more nuanced picture. These commenters tend to refrain from condemning either party, but still treat the lawsuit as a long shot.