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Blood Donations

Answered as per Hanafi Fiqh by Albalagh.net

Blood Donations

By Mufti Ebrahim Desai


Q.) I am a medical student, and I live in Norway. At our lectures and in general the population of Norway is advised to donate blood to a blood bank. This doesn’t pay anything and it is just a way to help people who are in need. I am wondering if it is allowed for me to donate blood as a Muslim. This is in fact for patients in need for blood.

A.) It is permissible to donate and transfuse blood if:

a) There is a desperate need to donate blood,
b) There is no other alternative. And,
c) This has been prescribed by an expert medical practitioner.

This permissibility is based on the principal of ‘necessity relaxes prohibition’. (Al-Ashbaah). However, the permissibility of blood donation and blood transfusion is determined by the following conditions:

a) The donor willingly donates his blood. If he is compelled to do so, it will not be permissible,
b) There is no danger to his (the donor’s) life or health,
c) The doctor feels that the patient will lose his life and there is no other alternative but recourse to blood transfusion. Or,
d) There is no fear of death but the recovery is not possible without blood transfusion.

It is not permissible to sell one’s blood or to pay the blood donor. However, if one is in need of blood desperately and the only means to obtain the blood is to purchase it, then only will it be permissible to pay for the blood.

Note: Blood donation and blood transfusion is not permissible for the sake of beautification or for any reason other than genuine necessity.

And Allah Ta’ala Knows Best

This answer was collected from Albalagh.net, which is an Islamic site with Q&A and articles authored by many world renowned scholars from the Muslim world. Many of Mufti Taqi Uthmani’s fatawa in English are found exclusively on this site.

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