The opinion of the Court was delivered by
POLLOCK, J.Plaintiff William Snyder contracted Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) from a transfusion of blood that the Bergen Community Blood Center (BCBC), a non-profit blood bank, had provided to St. Joseph’s Hospital. The BCBC is a member of defendant, the American Association of Blood Banks (AABB), an association of blood banks and blood-banking professionals. The primary issue is whether the AABB owed a duty of care to *273Snyder. A further issue is whether the AABB is entitled to charitable immunity under N.J.S.A. 2A:53-7.
In the Law Division, a jury found the AABB thirty-percent liable for Snyder’s damages of $1,350,000, or $405,000. The Appellate Division affirmed. 282 N.J.Super. 23, 659 A.2d 482 (1995). We granted the AABB’s petition for certification, 142 N.J. 517, 665 A.2d 1110 (1995), and now affirm.
I
On August 23, 1984, Snyder underwent open-heart surgery at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Paterson. During the surgery he received transfusions of several units of blood platelets, including unit 29F0784, which BCBC had supplied to St. Joseph’s.
At the time, no direct test existed to determine whether blood was infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS. Other means of making that determination, however, were available. Starting in 1985, the enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent-assay-sereening test (the ELISA test) enabled blood banks to screen for HIV.
Under a nationwide “look-back” program instituted that year, blood banks could determine whether a prospective donor who tested positive for HIV had donated blood before the development of the ELISA test. As part of the “look-back” program sponsored by the AABB, BCBC ascertained in 1986 that the donor of unit 29F0784 was HIV positive. That same year BCBC so informed St. Joseph’s Hospital. St. Joseph’s, in turn, informed Snyder’s doctor, who notified him in 1987. Snyder, who was not otherwise at risk, tested HIV positive. He has since contracted AIDS.
In February 1989, Snyder and his wife, Roslyn (collectively referred to as “plaintiffs”), filed a complaint in the Law Division against St.' Joseph’s, various physicians and other individuals, BCBC, and the AABB (collectively described as “defendants”). Plaintiffs asserted claims sounding in strict liability, breach of warranty, negligence, and consumer fraud. In the strict-liability *274claim, Snyder alleged that he had been transfused with a defective blood product that could have been made safe through available blood tests and donor-screening techniques. According to the plaintiffs, the AABB, however, resisted implementation of those tests and techniques. Snyder further alleged that BCBC and the AABB negligently had enhanced his risk of contracting AIDS by failing to implement procedures to prevent HIV-infected donors from giving blood. The AABB denied plaintiffs’ essential allegations and asserted the affirmative defense of charitable immunity.
In an earlier proceeding, the Law Division entered an order allowing plaintiffs to proceed with their negligence claim against the AABB. Further, the court ruled that plaintiffs were not entitled to discovery of BCBC’s blood-donor records.
The Appellate Division agreed that plaintiffs could maintain their negligence action. Snyder v. Mekhjian (Snyder I), 244 N.J.Super. 281, 290-93, 582 A.2d 307 (1990). Overruling the trial court, the Appellate Division allowed plaintiffs’ discovery of the donor’s records. We affirmed. 125 N.J. 328, 593 A.2d 318 (1991).
Ultimately, all defendants other than the AABB either settled or obtained dismissals. At the trial, the critical issue was whether the AABB had breached a duty of care to Snyder. Hence, the trial focused on the AABB’s role in the blood-banking industry and the reasonableness of its response to increasing evidence that blood or blood products could transmit AIDS.
At the conclusion of an eight-week trial, the jury found that the AABB had been negligent in not recommending surrogate testing. Surrogate testing refers to identifying people at risk for a disease by testing for some symptom or characteristic manifested by a majority of people who have contracted or are at risk of contracting the disease. In the early 1980s, one available surrogate test for HIV infected blood was that for the antibody to the hepatitis B core antigen (the HBc antibody).
The jury further found that the AABB’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing Snyder to contract HIV. It also found that the AABB was thirty-percent liable for plaintiffs’ injuries.
*275The Appellate Division affirmed. Writing for the court, Judge Pressler stated that, on the interlocutory appeal, the court had determined that the AABB owed Snyder a duty of care, and that the law of the ease precluded a different determination. 282 N.J.Super. at 43, 659 A.2d 482.
The Appellate Division explained that the “unique and dominant role of the AABB in blood-banking and the extent of its control over its institutional members” established the requisite relationship between the AABB and blood-produet recipients, “whose safety is its avowed paramount concern.” Id. at 43, 659 A.2d 482. Considering the risk involved and the “public policy concerns implicit in the blood-banking industry’s methods of operation,” the court determined that the “AABB is reasonably chargeable with a duty of care owed to those recipients whose life and health depend on the reasonableness and prudence of its actions.” Id. at 43-44, 659 A.2d 482.
On the charitable-immunity issue, the court reasoned that “although [the AABB] is a non-profit corporation engaged in necessary and useful services, [it] is not ‘organized exclusively for religious, charitable, educational, or hospital purposes.’” Id. at 41, 659 A.2d 482 (quoting N.J.S.A 2A:53-7). Accordingly, the court denied the AABB’s claim of charitable immunity.
II
A
Crucial to the assessment of the AABB’s alleged duty of care is its' role in the blood-banking industry in 1983-84. The blood-banking industry consists of a voluntary sector, which depends on voluntary donors, and a commercial sector, which depends on paid donors. Generally speaking, the voluntary sector provides whole blood and blood components, and the commercial sector provides plasma and plasma derivatives.
Central to the voluntary sector is the American Red Cross with its blood banks, community and hospital blood centers, and the *276AABB, which includes almost every blood bank in the United States. These voluntary blood banks rely on public-spirited donors for their blood supply. Voluntary blood banks commonly separate donated blood into three components: plasma, platelets, and red cells.
Dominating the commercial sector are manufacturers or fractionators of plasma derivatives. In the . early 1980s, fractionators collected approximately eighty percent of plasma from paid donors. The voluntary sector provided the remaining, twenty percent. Fractionators pool plasma from thousands of donors and process it to produce large batches of plasma derivatives, such as clotting factors for hemophiliacs. Each batch contains enough clotting factor to treat thousands of patients. Institute of Medicine, HIV and the Blood Supply: An Analysis of Crisis Decision-making 15 (1995) (the IOM Report).
State and federal regulations apply to both sectors of the blood-banking industry. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), an agency of the Public Health Service (PHS) in the United States Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), inspects and licenses blood banks and other blood facilities. See 21 U.S.C.A § 321(g)(1)(B) (broadly defining “drugs” to include “articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease,” which includes blood and blood products); 21 U.S.CA § 360(b) (requiring processing establishments, including blood banks, to register with the FDA); 42 U.S.C.A § 262(e) to (d) (requiring inspection and licensing by the FDA (as delegated by secretary of DHHS) of blood or blood-product facilities that participate in interstate commerce); 21 C.F.R. § 5.10(a)(1), (5) (1995) (delegating to FDA authority vested in the secretary, DHHS, and PHS in the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.CA §§ 301-95) and in 42 U.S.C.A §§ 262-63); 21 C.F.R. § 607.3(b) (1995) (defining blood as a drug). In New Jersey, the Department of Health (DOH) discharges similar responsibilities. See N.J.S.A. 26:2A-1 (authorizing DOH to regulate collection, processing and distribution of blood). A blood bank in New *277Jersey cannot operate without licenses from both the FDA and DOH. 42 U.S.C.A § 262(a); N.J.S.A 26:2A-4.
Against this background, we consider the role of the AABB. According to the AABB’s certificate of incorporation, the purpose of the AABB is
to foster the exchange of ideas and information relating to blood banks and blood transfusion services!;] ... to advance and incorporate high standards of performance and service by blood banks[;] ... to function as a clearing house for the exchange of blood and blood credits ... [and] to encourage the development of blood banks through education, public information and research.
The AABB describes itself as a “professional, non-profit, scientific and administrative association for individuals and institutions engaged in the many facets of blood and tissue banking, and transfusion and transplantation medicine.” It is “the only organization devoted exclusively to blood banking and blood transfusion services.” In the early 1980s, the AABB centers collected about half of the nation’s blood supply and transfused eighty percent of the blood to patients. Its institutional members were mainly hospitals and non-profit blood centers.
According to the AABB’s executive director, Joel Solomon, the general purpose of the AABB is “to develop and recommend standards on the practice of blood banking, to help promote the public health, ... and to conduct numerous programs for communication and education among organization members and the public at-large.” The AABB discharges its educational mission by conducting workshops and seminars, and by publishing books, newsletters, pamphlets, and a peer-review journal, Transfusion. Additionally, the AABB lobbies the United States Congress and state legislatures and participates in federal and state administrative rulemaking procedures.
Significantly, the AABB annually inspects and accredits member institutions. It conditions accreditation on compliance with standards published in its Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion Services and procedures outlined in its Technical Manual. According to the annual report, AABB standards often become FDA standards. As the AABB has declared, it “leads the indus*278try in setting policy and establishing standards of practice for its member blood banks in excess of the FDA.”
Both the state and federal government, as well as the blood-banking industry, generally accept AABB standards as authoritative. Consequently, blood banks throughout the nation rely on those standards. For example, BCBC relied on the AABB standards in developing its own operating procedures. In the words of Anthony Passaro, Executive Director of BCBC, the AABB’s standards in 1984 “were basically the Bible of the blood center.”
AABB’s inspections complement the annual inspection by the FDA. If a blood bank loses its AABB accreditation but retains its FDA and New Jersey licenses, it can continue to operate, but only with significant practical problems. Hospitals and other blood banks prefer to work with AABB-aceredited institutions.
The AABB also issues advisory recommendations and guidelines. The BCBC, which had only a part-time medical director, relied on the AABB for guidance in assuring the safety of its blood supply. According to Dr. Wilkinson, the BCBC’s medical director, and Anthony Passaro, its executive director, the BCBC in 1984 followed the AABB’s recommendations on AIDS screening. Furthermore, the BCBC would have followed any other AABB recommendations. Dr. Wilkinson testified:
Q: If the A.A.B.B. had recommended that you use a laboratory test for screening aids, would you have done so?
A: Yes.
To the same effect, Mr. Passaro testified:
Q. Mr. Passaro[,] [i]f the American Association of Blood Banks had recommended that you — not you personally — that the Bergen County Community Blood Center do a certain laboratory test for screening donors, would it have been done at the Blood Center?
A. Yes.
In the early 1980s, the AABB led the blood industry. Dr. George F. Grady, an expert in blood-banking procedures and transfusion-related viruses, testified that the AABB had established itself as the leader in setting blood-banking standards. The AABB, moreover, was an active member of the FDA’s influential *279Blood Products Advisory Council and advised the FDA on issues concerning the blood industry. In a recent study of the FDA’s response to the threat of AIDS, the Committee to Study HIV Transmission Through Blood and Blood Products (the Committee) of the Institute of Medicine found that “in the early 1980s, the FDA appeared too reliant upon analyses provided by industry-based members of the Blood Products Advisory Council.” IOM Report, supra, at 15.
Others also noted governmental deference to the AABB. Dr. Edgar Engleman, the director of the Stanford Blood Bank, testified that in 1984 the FDA took a passive role in developing standards and guidelines, essentially deferring to the AABB in determining the blood-banking industry’s response to AIDS. Dr. Thomas Asher, a microbiologist and blood expert who runs a blood-products company, testified that “most state ... governments incorporate into their state regulations the AABB standards, [which] are, in most cases, the state standards for licensing.”
At the state level, the DOH, when renewing blood-bank licenses, accepted reports of AABB inspections in lieu of its own inspections. N.J.A.C. 8:8-1.4(b) (May 21, 1984). DOH also accepted AABB’s standards for obtaining medical histories and conducting physical examinations of donors. N.J.A.C. 8:8-5.2 (May 21,1984).
Finally, in a December 1983 memorandum on potential blood-bank liability from transfusion-related AIDS, the AABB’s general counsel advised AABB members that “courts have frequently cited AABB’s standards as evidence of appropriate practice, and we believe that the courts will give credence to the recommendations made jointly by AABB and other blood banking organizations.”
The picture that emerges is of a private, tax-exempt organization with substantial power over the operation of blood banks, including BCBC. That the blood banks would accept direction from the AABB is understandable: it was their organization. We turn next to the AABB’s exercise of that power during the early years of the AIDS crisis.
*280B
The first report of severe immune deficiency among homosexuals surfaced in 1981. In 1985, the DHHS approved the ELISA test. Snyder received his transfusion in 1984. Our initial inquiry is whether the BCBC should have known in 1984 that blood and blood products could carry the HIV virus. Answering that question requires consideration of the information available to the AABB about the nature, cause, and transmission of AIDS. It also involves consideration of the roles of the AABB and of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), a public-health branch of DHHS, in investigating and warning of diseases, such as AIDS.
The CDC first sounded the alarm about AIDS. In 1981, in response to a rapidly spreading and often fatal immunological disorder among homosexual males, the CDC formed a group, subsequently known as the AIDS Task Force. The Task Force consisted of epidemiologists knowledgeable about hemophilia, hepatitis, and sexually-transmitted diseases. From 1982 to 1984, the Task Force played a pivotal role in publicizing the threat of AIDS to the nation’s blood supply.
The CDC’s primary means of alerting the medical and public-health communities of new diseases is through the publication of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). Between June 1981 and July 1982, the CDC reported in the MMWR a rapidly increasing number of cases, totaling 355, of previously rare immunosuppression-related ailments among homosexual men and intravenous drug users in New York, California, New Jersey, and Florida. The disease, now known as AIDS, had an extremely high mortality rate: forty percent of its victims had died. Data indicated, moreover, that the longer a patient suffered from the disease, the higher the mortality rate climbed. Initially, AIDS occurred only in gay men. By June 1982, however, other groups were at risk. Seventy-five percent of AIDS patients were gay men, twenty percent were intravenous (IV) drug users, and five percent were not readily classifiable.
*281The AIDS Task Force began to compile a composite description of the disease. Health officials had learned that AIDS victims exhibited persistently swollen lymph nodes long before the onset of other symptoms. One common symptom was depressed Tlymphoeyte helper-to-suppressor ratios, an immunological abnormality that reflects a reduced count of a certain lymphocyte, or white blood cell. Another symptom was a low absolute lymphocyte count, which indicates suppression of the immune system.
The two most prominent AIDS-associated diseases were pneumocystis pneumonia and Kaposi’s sarcoma. Before their occurrence in AIDS patients, both pneumocystis pneumonia and Kaposi’s sarcoma had been extremely rare. Pneumocystis pneumonia is a type of pneumonia that previously had occurred only in severely immunosuppressed patients, such as those undergoing cancer chemotherapy. Kaposi’s sarcoma is a skin malignancy that previously had appeared almost exclusively in elderly men. Other AIDS-related ailments included a form of lymphatic cancer known as non-Hodgkins lymphoma and tuberculosis.
Not all patients' suffered from the same diseases. Some had pneumocystis pneumonia; others, Kaposi’s sarcoma; and still others suffered from both. Almost all, however, displayed the T-cell ratio abnormality and depressed lymphocyte counts. The clustering of the symptoms among homosexual men and IV drug users and the shared abnormality in white blood cell counts led the CDC to conclude in 1982 that the evidence pointed to a single disease with a common underlying factor.
Plaintiffs presented several expert witnesses who explained the evolution of the discovery that blood and blood products could carry the AIDS virus. Dr. Donald Francis, a virologist and epidemiologist, served as director of the AIDS Task Force laboratory in the early 1980s and as assistant director of the CDC’s hepatitis-B effort in the 1970s. He testified that in 1982 the CDC detected a pattern in the transmission of AIDS and in the identification of the persons at risk. The pattern revealed that early homosexual AIDS patients were infecting others through *282sexual contact. Also apparent was an incubation period varying from several months to several years. The CDC postulated in June 1982 that the cause of the disease was an infectious agent, such as a virus.
According to Dr. Francis, the epidemiology of AIDS, which affected primarily homosexuals and IV drug users, bore a remarkable resemblance to that of hepatitis B. Hepatitis B is a liver disease that is transmitted perinatally (from a mother to her fetus) or by either sexual contact or blood. In an outbreak of hepatitis B in the 1970s, the major high-risk populations were homosexual men, TV drug users, and hemophiliacs. Because it could be transmitted by blood, transfusion-related hepatitis B had become a serious public-health concern, particularly to the blood-banking industry.
Dr. Ernest Simon, an expert in blood-banking and transfusion medicine, as well as the deputy director of the FDA’s blood division from 1976 to 1980, also testified. He stated that during the early 1980s, “[sjeven to ten percent of individuals who were transfused ... would [subsequently] show evidence of liver dysfunction probably related to transmissibility of viral hepatitis.” Members of the AIDS Task Force, noting the epidemiological similarity between AIDS and hepatitis B, feared that blood and blood products could carry AIDS.
On July 16,1982, after three hemophiliacs had developed AIDS, the CDC published a landmark report. According to Dr. Francis, the report “brought much of our speculation about the disease to ... a conclusion about its transmissibility.” The three hemophiliacs, unlike the average AIDS patient, were heterosexual men who did not use IV drugs. Furthermore, they did not fit within the observed New York-California geographic distribution of AIDS patients. They shared, however, one potential risk: all three treated their hemophilia with the blood product known as Factor VIII, a concentrated clotting factor. The CDC focused on that factor.
*283In its July 16, 1982, report in the MMWR, the CDC concluded that “[although the cause of [AIDS] is unknown, the occurrence among the three hemophiliac cases suggests the possible transmission of an agent through blood products.” Study of the Factor VIII manufacturing process led CDC researchers to believe that a virus caused AIDS. In producing Factor VIII, fractionators would filter out larger infectious agents, such as bacteria, to reduce the likelihood of contamination. The filters, however, could not trap smaller agents, such as viruses. Dr. Francis explained that the realization that the infectious agent was a virus that could be transmitted by blood “was a red flag and concerned us greatly about the potential for blood-borne transmission of other therapeutic blood products.”
On July 27,1982, the PHS held a national meeting of blood and blood-product collectors to discuss the threat of AIDS. At that meeting, members of the CDC Task Force reported their findings to blood-industry organizations, including the AABB.
■ In September 1982, Dr. Edward N. Brandt, Jr., the assistant secretary for health at DHHS, issued a directive incorporating the conclusions of the July meeting. In that directive, Dr. Brandt stated that
the recent occurrence of [pneumocystis pneumonia] in three patients with hemophilia raises the question whether the underlying immunodeficiency seen in these patients has the same etiology as among other groups with [pneumocystis pneumonia]. There is need to determine if certain blood products, particularly Factor VIII, are risk factors for AIDS.
Dr. Brandt instructed PHS agencies, including CDC, FDA, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), to increase their efforts to combat AIDS and to focus on the threat to hemophiliacs from the use of factor concentrate.
In November 1982, the CDC became concerned about the special risk that AIDS posed to doctors, nurses, and other hospital personnel who were exposed regularly to blood. Consequently, the CDC alerted them that “hepatitis-B virus infections occur very frequently among AIDS cases.” The CDC warned that “[a]t present, it appears prudent for hospital personnel to use the same *284precautions when caring for” AIDS patients as when caring for patients with hepatitis B.
Throughout 1982, evidence continued to accumulate that a blood-borne agent caused AIDS. The CDC reported that, as with the spread of the hepatitis virus among gay men, the AIDS virus was transmitted sexually and by blood. Vaccination specialists from the CDC, the FDA, and the NIH noted that the “epidemiology of AIDS suggests an unidentified and uncharacterized blood-borne agent as a possible cause of the underlying immunologic defect.” Moreover, the total number of AIDS cases was doubling every six months. By December, the number of hemophiliacs diagnosed with AIDS likewise had doubled.
Thus, by late 1982, the pattern for AIDS transmission was clear. Dr. Francis testified that some suspected but unconfirmed cases of transfusion-associated AIDS had surfaced in October and November 1982. On December 10, 1982, the CDC reported that an infant who at birth in March 1981 had received a number of transfusions later developed AIDS-like symptoms. The infant’s parents did not belong to any known risk group. A donor of one of the units later developed AIDS. The CDC noted that “several features of the infant’s illness resemble those seen .among adults with AIDS.” It explained:
The etiology of AIDS remains unknown, but its reported occurrence among homosexual men, intravenous drug abusers, and persons with hemophilia A suggests it may be caused by an infectious agent transmitted sexually or through exposure to blood or blood products. If the infant’s illness described in this report is AIDS, its occurrence following receipt of blood products from a known AIDS case adds support to the infectious-agent hypothesis.
If the platelet transfusion contained an etiologic agent for AIDS, one must assume that the agent can be present in the blood of a donor before onset of symptomatic illness and that the incubation period for such illness can be relatively long.
Because of the long incubation period for AIDS, the Task Force feared that the undiscovered cases greatly exceeded those that had been reported.
*285One week later, the CDC reported four cases of AIDS in infants under the age of two whose mothers belonged to high-risk populations, but who had not received any blood transfusions. In an additional twelve suspected cases of infant AIDS, nine of the mothers were IV drug users. The CDC reported that the children could have been infected by the “[transmission of an ‘AIDS agent’ from mother to child, either in útero or shortly after birth.” That possibility, according to Dr. Francis, “really ftll[ed] in all of the pieces of the puzzle of transmission here____ The epidemiology of HIV now looked identical to hepatitis B virus.”
Members of the CDC AIDS Task Force developed a model of the cause and transmission of AIDS. Dr. Francis explained:
[W]e’re talking about an infectious, viral agent, that was in the blood of individuals, that had the same epidemiologic pattern of sexual, blood-borne and perinatal ... transmission that hepatitis B virus had, that destroyed a specific lymphocyte, specific [white blood] cell in the immune system____
The person that would be likely to have this virus ... would be gay men and intravenous drug users or their sexual contacts.
c
Alarmed at the prospect of AIDS in the blood supply, the CDC called an emergency workshop in Atlanta for January 4, 1983. The purpose of the meeting was to ascertain how to prevent the transmission of AIDS through blood and blood products. Representatives of government, the AABB, the American Red Cross, the Council for Community Blood Banks, the National Hemophilia Foundation, the National Gay Task Force, and other organizations attended the meeting. The AIDS Task Force was convinced that AIDS was blood-transmissible, and that its epidemiology mirrored that of hepatitis B, “involving the same high-risk groups and in the same proportions.”
The Task Force also presented disturbing information about the risk of the transmission of AIDS in the blood supply. By that time, the CDC had reported six cases of transfusion-associated AIDS. A study of 140 gay men with AIDS in San Francisco revealed that at least ten had admitted donating blood in previous *286years. Because the specific causative agent for AIDS had not yet been identified, the Task Force asserted that persons at high risk for AIDS should not donate blood.
The Task Force recommended three methods to screen out high-risk donors: (1) direct questioning of prospective donors to determine if they belonged to high-risk groups; (2) detañed recording of medical histories of prospective donors to determine any indications of early AIDS symptoms; and (3) institution of surrogate testing of coñected blood. Together, these three methods would have prevented blood from high-risk donors from entering the blood supply. SpecificaHy, surrogate testing would have complemented the other two methods by providing an objective test of blood from high-risk donors who were symptom-free and reluctant to admit to homosexual activity or IV drug use.
Consistent with that recommendation, the Task Force proposed three surrogate tests: (1) the hepatitis-B core-antibody test (core test), which tested for people who either had been or are infected with hepatitis B; (2) the T-cell ratio test, which tested for the specific immunological abnormality common in AIDS patients; and (3) the absolute-lymphocyte test, which tested for a reduced level of lymphocytes.
In 1982, Dr. Thomas Spira of the CDC Task Force conducted a study of the effectiveness of various surrogate tests. He concluded that the core test would identify a large majority of people with or at risk of contracting AIDS. Of patients with AIDS, the core test revealed that eighty-eight percent of gay men, one-hundred percent of IV drug users, and eighty-seven percent of Haitians tested positive for the hepatitis-B core antibody. Seventy-nine percent of the control group of homosexual and bisexual men not suffering from AIDS — the most significant high-risk group — tested positive for hepatitis B. This result was consistent with earlier studies indicating high levels of hepatitis-B infection among gay men. M.T. Schreeder, et al., Hepatitis B in Homosexual Men: Prevalence of Infection and Factors Related to Transmission, 146 J. Infectious Diseases 8 (July 1982). Because hepatitis B was *287uncommon in the general population, the Task Force estimated that five percent of the remaining healthy male population would test positive. On balance, the Task Force concluded that the core test was the most promising.
At the January 4, 1983, meeting, the AABB and other blood-banking representatives strenuously disagreed with the CDC. Dr. Joseph Bove, chairman of the AABB Committee on Transfusion Transmitted Disease, stated that he was unconvinced that blood could transmit AIDS. He argued that surrogate testing was unnecessary and that direct questioning was improper.
Dr. Francis rejoined that the AABB’s response was “remarkably obstructive.” He recognized the response as “basically an attempt to deny that there was a threat.” The AABB nonetheless persisted in arguing that surrogate testing and direct questioning would be too costly and would lead to the rejection of too much blood. Dr. Francis described the meeting:
[T]he reluctance and the inertia that we at CDC faced with the blood banks in that meeting was so ... ridiculous and so alarming that it got to the point of me literally pounding on the table and shouting to these individuals as to how many deaths it’s going to take before you will act.
And I was saying, do you need ten, do you need twenty, do you need forty, when we get to that level, then are you going to act?
This was a very heated meeting because of this incredible counter balance of those of us investigating the epidemic and seeing the urgency of the situation ... to put the responsibility for action onto the blood banks, because presumably, they were the only ones that could act, that there — the imbalance of this urgency from us and the obstruction, the negative response from them was a most disturbing time, one of the most disturbing times in my twenty years in public health.
Following the meeting, the lines hardened. The AABB criticized both direct-donor questioning and surrogate-blood testing. In a joint statement of January 13,1983, the AABB, the American Red Cross, and the Council of Community Blood Banks described the CDC data as “insufficient,” the evidence “inconclusive,” and the possibility that blood transmitted AIDS as “still unproven.” Still, as the CDC Task Force had urged, they recommended that their members take from donors detailed medical histories emphasizing early AIDS symptoms. The joint statement continued, *288however, that the AABB and the others “[did] not advise routine implementation of any laboratory screening program for AIDS by blood banks at this time,” even though “there are laboratory and clinical findings that are present in nearly all AIDS patients.” Finally, the AABB and the other organizations rejected direct questioning of donors about sexual preference as ineffective and as an unjustifiable “invasion of privacy.” Confronted with escalating evidence that blood transmitted the AIDS virus and that surrogate testing would reveal the presence of the virus, the AABB became increasingly intransigent. ■
Throughout 1983, the evidence continued to mount. On March 4, 1983, the PHS reported in MMWR that “the occurrence of AIDS among IV drug users” supports a finding that “blood products or blood appear responsible for AIDS among hemophilia patients.” The PHS recognized the need for, but did not recommend, surrogate testing.
A month later, the AABB issued a set of standard operating procedures that required only the distribution of AIDS educational material to donors and continued medical history screening. The AABB refused to require surrogate testing or direct questioning of donors.
That refusal, like Dr. Bove’s testimony at the January 4, 1983, CDC meeting, belied internal concerns within the AABB. In December 1982, Dr. Bove wrote an internal memo indicating a growing concern that AIDS could cause “major problems in the blood collecting sector.” He continued that his “current best guess is that we are dealing with an infectious agent able to be spread by blood and blood products and that individuals who receive large quantities of factor concentrate are at an increased risk.” In a January 1983 report, Dr. Bove noted that a recently discovered transfusion-related AIDS case “increases the probability that AIDS may be spread by blood.” He recognized that “there is little doubt in my mind that additional transfusion related eases and additional eases in patients with hemophilia will *289surface,” and that the CDC was actively pursuing more transfusion-related cases. Consequently, Dr. Bove advised that
the most we can do in this situation is buy time ... [before the AABB] will be obliged to review our current stance and probably move in the same direction as the commercial fractionators. By that I mean it will be essential for us to take some active steps to screen out donor populations who are at high risk of AIDS.
Additionally, Dr. Bove expressed concern that “we do not want anything that we do now to be interpreted by society (or by legal authorities) as agreeing with the concept — as yet unproven — that AIDS can be spread by blood.” Dr. Bove stressed that the AABB must do “whatever is medically correct,” but that “we may have to do a little more, since we are accused of burying our heads in the sand.” Notwithstanding these qualifications, Dr. Bove recognized that blood carries the AIDS virus and that the AABB should actively screen high-risk donors.
In a report dated March 29, 1983, Dr. Bove noted increasing pressure from the federal government and the CDC. He predicted that the “next step on the horizon will probably be a request to institute a mandatory screening of donor blood.” Somewhat ambivalently, Dr. Bove stated, however, “that the evidence linking AIDS to blood transfusion is unconvincing.” For whatever reason, he and the AABB could not accept the fact that blood can transmit the AIDS virus. Yet, in October 1983, in a memo to the AABB Board of Directors, Dr. Bove warned the AABB board of directors that a forthcoming article by Dr. James W. Curran and others in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine documented eighteen cases of transfusion-related AIDS.
The plasma industry, which relies on paid donors, took a much more cautious view. Whenever a plasma donor later developed AIDS, the industry would withdraw all coagulation products made from that donor’s blood.
Consistent with that approach, the FDA, in a March 24, 1983, memorandum to licensed manufacturers of plasma derivatives, prohibited use of plasma “collected from donors suspected of being at increased risk of transmitting AIDS” from being used to produce “derivatives already known to have a risk of transmitting *290infectious diseases,” such as the clotting factors used in treating hemophilia. Thus, the memorandum evidences the decision of the federal government to exclude high-risk donors, specifically sexually-aetive homosexuals. Existing regulations already excluded IV drug users. In sum, the FDA’s recommendation reflected its growing concern about AIDS contamination of blood and blood products.
Beginning in 1983, some blood banks began to institute surrogate testing. In January 1983, Dr. Thomas Asher began testing all blood for total lymphocyte count at his commercial blood-fractionating facility. Seven months later, the Stanford University Hospital blood bank instituted the T-cell ratio test. Several northern California blood banks instituted the core test in 1984. No AIDS eases resulted from blood tested at any of these facilities. At a December 1983 meeting of the FDA’s Blood Products Advisory Committee, Dr. Edgar Engleman, director of the Stanford blood bank, reported that the bank had rejected, on the basis of T-cell test results, two high-risk donors who should have self-excluded after reading the AIDS information materials, but who elected to donate anyway.
Two influential reports published in early 1984 addressed transfusion-associated AIDS. Dr. Curran’s article in the January 12, 1984, New England Journal of Medicine — the article about which Dr. Bove had alerted the AABB board of directors in October 1983 — concluded that AIDS could be transmitted through blood and blood products. James W. Curran, et al., Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) Associated mth Transfusions, 310 New England Journal of Medicine 69, 73-74 (Jan. 12, 1984); see Kozup v. Georgetown Univ., 663 F.Supp. 1048, 1052 (D.D.C.1987) (describing the article as the definitive statement that AIDS was caused by blood-borne agent).
A subsequent article in the Annals of Internal Medicine, another respected peer-review journal, quantified the risks associated with blood transfusion and treatment of hemophilia. The article stated:
*291Present evidence increasingly indicates that the syndrome is caused by an agent that may be transmitted through transfusions, but risk to a person receiving blood is very small. During 1983, 28 cases of transfusion-associated syndrome were diagnosed ... in the United States. Each year, more than 3 million persons receive transfusions in the United States: thus for 1983, the crude annual rate of reported cases of the syndrome approximates 1 case per 100,000 recipients.
[James W. Curran and Llewelyn F. Barker, The Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Associated with Transfusions: The Evolving Perspective, 100 Annals of Internal Medicine 298, 299 (Feb. 1984) ].
The statistics for hemophiliacs were far more severe:
The 12 cases of [AIDS] diagnosed in 1983 among persons with hemophilia represent an annual rate of 1 case per 1000 hemophiliacs receiving antihemophilic concentrates. The relatively high rate among hemophiliacs may result from the method of concentrate production: each hemophiliac is exposed annually to several concentrate lots, each containing plasma pooled from thousands of donors.
[Ibid,]
On April 13,1984, at a telephone conference of the FDA’s Blood Products Advisory Committee, the FDA announced the following position:
The recent decision by several blood and plasma organizations to use the anti-core test was a voluntary decision on their part with the recognition of the limitations of the test and the lack of data to support the premise that excluding anti-core positive individuals from donor pools will have any impact on the frequency with which donors are later found to have developed AIDS.
At this point, it would seem reasonable to continue voluntary and cooperative efforts aimed at assessing the potential usefulness of a variety of laboratory tests for their predictive value in identifying individuals who are in a pre-clinical stage of AIDS. On the basis of the information available to date, it is possible that screening tests other than anti-core may ultimately prove to be more predictive and generally useful in improving the safety of blood and blood products. It would therefore be unwise to adopt anti-core testing to the exclusion of other screening tests.
In July 1984, the Blood Products Advisory Committee’s Hepatitis B Core Antibody Testing Study Group (study group) reported its findings on the core test. The study group consisted of eleven members representing the FDA, plasma fractionators, and major blood-industry associations, including the AABB. The majority of the study group, including the AABB, rejected the core test. It contended that the core test would lead to the rejection of too many healthy donors, was not sufficiently specific, and cost too much. Further, the majority contended that self-screening was working. A minority recommended adoption of the core test. It *292asserted that self-screening was not working and urged that the core test would exclude sixty to eighty percent of high-risk donors. As a matter of policy, the minority concluded that concerns about blood safety outweighed concerns about a diminishing blood supply or excessive costs.
On April 24, 1984, Secretary Margaret Heckler of the DHHS announced that researchers had isolated the AIDS virus and had developed a blood test for AIDS. She believed that the test, now known as the ELISA test, would be available within six months. In fact, the DHHS approved the ELISA test on March 4, 1985, seven months after Snyder received his transfusion.
Ill
Against that background, we consider whether the AABB owed Snyder a duty of care. Our analysis begins by recognizing that the AABB did not directly obtain, process, or transfuse the infected platelets that caused Snyder to contract AIDS. Thus, the AABB had no immediate connection with either the donor or with Snyder.
The determination of the existence of a duty ultimately is a question of fairness and policy. Crawn v. Campo, 136 N.J. 494, 501, 643 A.2d 600 (1994); Dunphy v. Gregor, 136 N.J. 99, 108, 642 A.2d 372 (1994); Kelly v. Gwinnell, 96 N.J. 538, 544, 476 A.2d 1219 (1984); Goldberg v. Housing Auth., 38 N.J. 578, 583, 186 A.2d 291 (1962). An important, although not dispositive consideration, is the foreseeability of injury to others from the defendant’s conduct. Carter Lincoln-Mercury v. EMAR Group, 135 N.J. 182, 194, 638 A.2d 1288 (1994). Also important are the nature of the risk posed by the defendant’s conduct, the relationship of the parties, and the impact on the public of the imposition of a duty of care. Dunphy, supra, 136 N.J. at 108, 642 A.2d 372. The absence of a contractual or special relationship is not dispositive. Carter Lincoln-Mercury, supra, 135 N.J. at 195-97, 638 A.2d 1288; see also Aronsohn v. Mandara, 98 N.J. 92, 105, 484 A.2d 675 (1984) (holding that lack of privity of contract between build*293ing contractor and third persons does not bar recovery for those injured by defendant’s negligence); H. Rosenblum, Inc. v. Adler, 93 N.J. 324, 338-39, 461 A.2d 138 (1983) (holding that reasonably foreseeable consequences of auditor’s negligent opinion about corporation’s finances, not privity in contract, define duty owed to persons foreseeably relying on auditor’s representations).
Blood banks, hospitals, and patients rely on the AABB for the safety of the nation’s blood supply. A patient contemplating surgery cannot assure the safety of blood drawn from others. Of necessity, patients rely on others, including the AABB, for that assurance.
Society has not thrust on the AABB its responsibility for the safety of blood and blood products. The AABB has sought and cultivated that responsibility. For years, it has dominated the establishment of standards for the blood-banking industry. To illustrate, the AABB’s January 1983 joint statement with the Red Cross and Council of Community Blood Centers endorsed the AABB-recommended screening measures as “prudent and appropriate.” In a March 31, 1983, AABB press release, Dr. Bove stated:
We would also like to assure the public that the chance of anyone acquiring AIDS through a blood transfusion is remote____ Every precaution is being taken to assure that each unit of blood transfused is the safest possible.
By words and conduct, the AABB invited blood banks, hospitals, and patients to rely on the AABB’s recommended procedures. The AABB set the standards for voluntary blood banks. At all relevant times, it exerted considerable influence over the practices and procedures over its member banks, including BCBC. On behalf of itself and its member banks, the AABB lobbies legislatures, participates in administrative proceedings, and works with governmental health agencies in setting blood-banking policy. In many respects, the AABB wrote the rules and set the standards for voluntary blood banks.
We next examine the severity and foreseeability of the risk that blood transfusions could spread the AIDS virus. The severity of *294the risk of transfusion-related AIDS is a function of the mortality rate and the infection rate. In 1984, the overall mortality rate of AIDS was forty percent, but for those who had AIDS for more than three years, the rate approached nearly 100 per cent. The infection rate was increasing exponentially. For example, the CDC reported thirty-eight cases of transfusion-related AIDS by December 1983, up from six cases reported in January of that year. The CDC believed that as more people became infected with AIDS, the risk to the blood supply also would increase. Thus, the risk that blood transfusions could transmit AIDS was severe.
The risk also was foreseeable. Epidemiologists at the CDC believed as early as 1982 that the AIDS virus could be transmitted by blood and blood products. In January 1984, Dr. Curran’s article in the New England Journal of Medicine confirmed that belief. Thus, before Snyder received his transfusion, the AABB should have foreseen that a blood transfusion could transmit AIDS.
We are unpersuaded by the AABB’s argument that because the evidence was inconclusive, it owed no duty to Snyder. The foreseeability, not the conclusiveness, of harm suffices to give rise to a duty of care. By 1983, ample evidence supported the conclusion that blood transmitted the AIDS virus. In early 1984, the AABB knew that AIDS was a rapidly spreading, fatal disease and that apparently healthy donors could infect others. The AABB also knew that blood and blood products probably could transmit AIDS and that each infected blood donor could infect many donees. Thus, the AABB knew, or should have known, in 1984 that the risk of AIDS infection from blood transfusions was devastating. We agree with the lower courts that the record establishes that the AABB owed Snyder a duty of care.
The AABB claims that considerations of public policy and fairness negate the imposition of a duty of care extending to Snyder. Specifically, the AABB contends that it should not be found liable for taking the “wrong side” of a debate involving medical uncertainties and public policy. According to the AABB, *295the imposition of liability violates its constitutionally-protected right to participate in the political process. The argument misses the mark.
The AABB relies on the Noerr-Pennington doctrine, which states generally that because of First Amendment considerations, commercial interests that lobby to influence government do not violate antitrust laws. California Motor Transp. Co. v. Trucking Unlimited, 404 U.S. 508, 510-11, 92 S.Ct. 609, 611-12, 30 L.Ed.2d 642 (1972); United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657, 669-70, 85 S.Ct. 1585, 1593, 14 L.Ed.2d 626 (1965); Eastern R.R. Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127, 135-38, 81 S.Ct. 523, 529-30, 5 L.Ed.2d 464 (1961); see generally 4 Ronald E. Rotunda and John E. Nowak, Treatise on Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure 2d 520.54 (1992). The United States Supreme Court has not extended the doctrine beyond the field of antitrust. Lower federal courts, however, have applied the Noerr-Pennington doctrine to other areas of the law, including tort liability. See, e.g., South Dakota v. Kansas City S. Indus., Inc., 880 F.2d 40, 50-51 (8th Cir.1989) (finding that defendant’s litigation activities were protected under Noerr-Pennington doctrine against liability for tortious interference with contract); Brownsville Golden Age Nursing Home, Inc. v. Wells, 839 F.2d 155, 160 (3d Cir.1988) (holding that “as a matter of law, [the individuals’] actions in calling [the nursing home’s] violations to the attention of state and federal authorities and eliciting public interest cannot serve as the basis of tort liability”); Havoco of America, Ltd. v. Hollobow, 702 F.2d 643, 648-51 (7th Cir.1983) (holding that Noerr-Pennington doctrine immunized defendant against liability for tortious interference based on right to complain to Securities and Exchange Commission); First Nat’l Bank of Omaha v. Marquette Nat’l Bank, 482 F.Supp. 514, 521 (D.Minn. 1979) (holding that Noerr-Pennington immunity applicable to plaintiffs antitrust claim also applies to 42 U.S.C.A § 1983 claim); Village Supermarket v. Mayfair, 269 N.J.Super. 224, 230-31, 634 A.2d 1381 (Law Div.1993) (holding that participation in planning board hearings is afforded First Amendment protection against *296state tort claims under Noerr-Pennington doctrine). But see Robert A. Zauzmer, Note, The Misapplication of the NoerrPennington Doctrine in Non-Antitrust Right to Petition Cases, 36 Stan. L.Rev. 1243, 1262-71 (1984) (arguing against application of Noerr-Pennington doctrine beyond antitrust area).
We need not determine whether the Noerr-Pennington doctrine extends beyond antitrust law to tort liability. The AABB’s liability does not rest on its right to petition government. The jury found that the AABB was negligent for failing to recommend that its member banks adopt surrogate testing, and not for the AABB’s lobbying efforts or its participation on the FDA Blood Products Advisory Board. In brief, the Noerr-Pennington doctrine does not apply.
The AABB also alleges that the imposition of a duty contravenes the public policy of fostering open debate on health issues. It warns that imposition of such a duty would chill debate on public-health issues and impair scientific discourse. According to the AABB, the imposition of a duty of care would engender fear of liability that would result in the adoption of ill-conceived standards. Finally, the AABB contends that it did not accept the core test because of concerns about the effect that such a test would produce on the availability and cost of blood.
These concerns, however, should not have diverted the AABB from its paramount responsibility to protect the safety of the blood supply. Recognition of that responsibility should have led the AABB to consider more carefully the risks to recipients from the transfusion of infected blood. When balanced against the devastating risks from a disease such as AIDS, the imposition of a duty of care on the AABB does not, in our opinion, offend the public policy favoring open debate on controversial scientific issues.
Relevant also to the determination of the AABB’s duty of care is its role in the governmental regulation of the blood-banking industry. In 1984, the AABB was more than a trade association. It was the governing body of a significantly self-regulated industry. The AABB, for example, told its member banks how to *297screen, obtain, and distribute blood. To assure compliance with its standards, the AABB accredited and inspected its member banks. The clearest example of the AABB’s control in 1984 over its member banks emanates from the 1984 DOH regulations of blood banks. Under those regulations, DOH required blood banks to meet both the FDA and AABB standards pertaining to medical histories and physical examinations of donors. N.J.AC. 8:8-5.2 (May 21, 1984). At that time, the AABB standards were more stringent than those of the FDA Furthermore, the DOH accepted AABB inspection reports in lieu of making its own inspections when renewing blood-bank licenses. N.J AC. 8:8-1.4(b) (May 21, 1984). Thus, if a blood bank failed the annual AABB inspection on the taking of medical histories, that bank could lose its license to operate in New Jersey. In sum, at least in New Jersey in 1984, the AABB was not a mere advisory body. It exercised control of its member banks, including BCBC.
As the record reflects, moreover, the AABB was a major player in both state and federal government in setting blood policy in the 1980s. The AABB contends that because it had such a significant role in setting public policy, it should not owe a duty of care to a private party. We disagree.
Although the AABB’s mission doubtless has altruistic overtones, the bottom line is that the AABB represents its interests and those of its members. At stake for its members was a substantial financial interest in the regulation of the industry. In 1984, voluntary blood banks generated revenues of approximately one billion dollars. As AABB director Gilbert Clark stated, “ ‘think of us as tax-exempt rather than not-for-profit. We have to make a profit.’” Andrea Rock, Inside the Billion-Dollar Business of Blood, Money 153, 158 (March 1986); see also Linda M. Dorney, Comment, Culpable Conduct with Impunity: The Blood Industry and the FDA’s Responsibility for the Spread of AIDS Through Blood Products, 3 J. Pharm. L. 129, 132 n. 34 (1994) (reporting that American Red Cross blood program generated average profit of $38 million per year from 1980-87). Blood is big business.
*298Unlike governmental agencies, the AABB was not created by statute. It does not act pursuant to a government mandate. Nor is it accountable either to the public or another branch of government. No matter how much power the AABB exercised, the inescapable fact is that it is not a governmental agency. Consequently, we need not defer to the AABB’s decisions on protection of the blood supply and allocation of industry resources, as we might otherwise defer to agency determinations.
Likewise, we reject the contention of our dissenting colleague, post at 317, 676 A.2d at 1060, that the AABB enjoyed qualified immunity, remaining liable only for the failure to act in good faith. Relevant to the determination whether a private association is entitled to qualified immunity as a quasi-govemmental entity are both the association’s activities and its relationship to government. In each case in which a court has recognized a private entity’s claim of immunity, the entity had performed quasigovemmental functions pursuant to a governmental grant of authority. Austin Mun. Sec., Inc. v. National Ass’n of Sec. Dealers, Inc., 757 A.2d 676 (5th Cir.1985), involved the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), a self-regulatory organization formed under the authority of the Maloney Over-the-Counter Market Act of 1938, 15 U.S.C.A § 78o-3, which amended the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C.A §§ 78a-7811. Congress empowered organizations like the NASD “to enforce ... ‘compliance by members of the industry with both the legal requirements laid down in the Exchange Act and the ethical standards going beyond those requirements.’ ” Austin Mun. Sec., supra, 757 A.2d at 680 (quoting Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. NASD, 616 A.2d 1363, 1367 (5th Cir.1980)). Because the NASD was performing disciplinary functions pursuant to a congressional mandate, the court accorded it “absolute immunity from civil liability for actions connected with the disciplining of its members.” Id. at 692. Kwoun v. Southeast Missouri Professional Standards Review Org., 811 A.2d 401, 406-07 (8th Cir.1987), involved a medical peer-review group that was under *299contract with DHHS to review physicians’ activities under Medicare. Because the peer-review group acted under a congressionally-authorized contract to conduct a quasi-prosecutorial review of physicians’ activities, the court accorded it absolute immunity from tort claims. Id. at 408-09; see also Citrano v. Allen Correctional Ctr., 891 F.Supp. 312, 317 (W.D.La.1995) (granting qualified immunity to employees of private corporation operating prison under contract with state). But see Manis v. Corrections Corp. of America, 859 F.Supp. 302, 304-05 (M.D.Tenn.1994) (finding that private corporation operating prison was not entitled to qualified immunity from suit under 42 U.S.C.A § 1983). Similarly, the mental hospital in Sherman v. Four County Counseling Ctr., 987 F.2d 397, 405-06 (7th Cir.1993), which was operating under a court order to admit a patient on an emergency basis, was fulfilling a public function analogous to that of a state hospital. Consequently, the court extended to the hospital qualified immunity from tort liability. Id. at 406.
The dissent relies on Berends v. City of Atlantic City, 263 N.J.Super. 66, 621 A.2d 972 (App.Div.1993), to support the contention that the AABB should be immune from the consequences of its negligence because it was performing “a quasi-govemmental task that the state would have to perform.” Post at 314, 676 A.2d at 1058. According to the dissent, “it would be anomalous to punish the AABB for its actions since its decisions resulted from its participation in a process on which the government’s immunity is founded.” Ibid. We disagree.
The facts of the Berends ease, which center on an August 27, 1986, airplane crash at the Atlantic City municipal airport, differ significantly from those in the present case. On May 17, 1986, Atlantic City had closed one of two runways at the airport because of safety concerns. Berends, supra, 263 N.J.Super. at 70, 621 A.2d 972. Pursuant to a contract with the city, Pan Am Management Systems, Inc. (Pan Am) began to operate the airport on June 1, 1986. Id. at 73, 621 A.2d 972. The accident occurred on the second runway. Id. at 69, 621 A.2d 972. Plaintiff claimed that *300the accident would not have happened if Pan Am had opened the first runway. Id. at 71, 621 A.2d 972.
In affirming summary judgment for all defendants, the Appellate Division hypothesized in dicta that even if “Pan Am had unilateral authority to reopen the runway [it] should not be faulted for deferring to the city’s decision to keep the runway closed based on the city’s extensive experience in operating [the airport].” Id. at 83, 621 A.2d 972. Thus, the Appellate Division reasoned that Pan Am could not have been negligent if it had deferred to the city’s decision to close the first runway. The court pointed out that Pan Am had “made its decision responsibly in concert with the airport’s owner [the city], the [Federal Aviation Administration], the N.J. Division of Aeronautics and the public.” Ibid.
Pan Am’s claim of governmental immunity relates back to the contract with Atlantic City, which had “extensive experience” in operating the airport.' Unlike Pan Am, the AABB did not act pursuant to a contract with any governmental agency. Significantly, moreover, the relative roles of Pan Am and the AABB in their respective industries differed. Pan Am operated the airport under strict federal and state regulation. Id. at 74, 621 A.2d 972. In the blood-banking industry, by comparison, the AABB was more influential and the governmental regulators more lenient. See supra at 312-16, 676 A.2d at 1058-60. For years, the AABB had induced the industry to rely on the AABB’s blood-banking standards and recommendations. Nothing other than its own self-interest and tragically bad judgment prevented the AABB from recommending surrogate testing. Finally, the decision-making process differs substantially in the two cases. Pan Am participated in a multi-agency decision-making process that included public hearings and participation. Berends, supra, 263 N.J.Super. at 73-75, 621 A.2d 972. In contrast, the AABB reached its decision not to recommend surrogate testing internally, in closed sessions. Because of these differences, we conclude that Berends is not *301helpful in resolving whether the AABB is entitled to governmental immunity.
The dissent cites several cases in which “[c]ourts have granted immunity to private parties for their good-faith performance of quasi-governmental tasks.” Post at 316, 676 A.2d at 1060. Many of the cases on which the dissent relies involve immunity for arbitrators. Post at 316, 676 A.2d at 1060. Arbitrators derive their immunity from the discharge of quasi-judicial functions pursuant to a federal statute, the Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C.A. §§ 1 to 16. Under the Arbitration Act, Congress intended arbitration as a form of alternative dispute resolution in which the arbitrator takes the place of a judge. Corey v. New York Stock Exchange, 691 F.2d 1205, 1209 (2d Cir.1982) (stating that “[b]y private agreement the parties have substituted the arbitrators for a judge as the decision-maker in their case”). The New Jersey Arbitration Act embodies a similar policy and intent. N.J.S.A. 2A:24-1 to -11; Barcon Assoc. v. Tri-County Asphalt Corp., 86 N.J. 179, 186-87, 430 A.2d 214 (1981). As the Corey court stated, “[t]o allow collateral attack against arbitrators would also emasculate the appeal provisions of the federal Arbitration Act.” Corey, supra, 691 F.2d at 1211.
Admittedly, the AABB’s activities in setting industry standards, recommending practices, and conducting inspections seem like those of a governmental agency. Furthermore, both the federal government and New Jersey relied on the AABB’s performance of those activities. For example, in 1984, FDA regulations allowed blood banks to rely on AABB standards as long as they were consistent with, and at least as stringent as, FDA regulations. 21 C.F.R. § 606.100(d) (1984). As previously indicated, moreover, supra at 278, 294, 676 A.2d at 1040, 1049, the DOH incorporated into its regulations AABB standards for medical histories and physical examinations of donors. Neither the FDA nor the DOH contracted with the AABB for the regulation of the blood-banking industry. Nor did either governmental agency delegate to the AABB the authority to regulate that industry. Thus, the AABB acted without the benefit of governmental authority.
*302The dissent urges that we accord the AABB the benefit of qualified immunity without imposing on it the burdens of public office. It contends that “[t]he majority seeks to have it both ways: by finding a duty of care and liability because of the governmental authority delegated to the AABB, but then denying immunity because of a perceived lack of governmental authority.” Post at 316-819, 676 A.2d at 1060-1061. Not so. The contrary is true. By defending the AABB’s status as a private organization free from public accountability while conferring on the AABB governmental immunity, the dissent seeks to impute to the AABB power without responsibility. From our perspective, the DOH’s reliance on AABB standards and inspections, like the AABB’s lobbying efforts and participation in the formulation of public policy, reflect the power of the AABB in the blood-banking industry.
Merely because the AABB sometimes acted like a governmental agency does not mean that it was sueh an agency or the functional equivalent of one. No law or other governmental directive required the AABB to subordinate its interests to those of the public. Indeed, the record reflects the AABB’s unswerving commitment to its interests and those of its members.
Although the AABB may have made a “policy-bound decision,” post at 318, 676 A.2d at 1061, the process that led to that decision differed significantly from that of governmental agencies. Unlike the decisions of such agencies, the AABB’s decisions were not subject to public scrutiny. See 5 U.S.C.A §§ 551-59, 701-06 (federal Administrative Procedure Act, generally providing for public participation in administrative rulemaking, public access to agency records, and judicial review of federal agency decisions); N.J.S.A. 10:4-6 to -21 (the New Jersey Open Public Meetings Act, requiring advance notice of and opportunity for the public to attend meetings of public bodies); N.J.S.A 52:14B-1 to -15 (the New Jersey Administrative Procedure Act, establishing public participation procedures and requirements for rulemaking and contested cases). The internal AABB meetings that yielded the *303decision not to recommend surrogate testing were not open to the public. Nor were minutes of those meetings publicly available. Discussions at those meetings extended beyond blood safety and supply to concerns about the need to maintain the appearance of unity among the major blood organizations, the growing public fear of AIDS in the blood supply, the AABB’s public image, and its potential liability in tort.
The dissent’s attempt to compare the AABB to entities entitled to qualified immunity fails for another reason. Those other entities are subject to the strictures of procedural safeguards or governmental oversight. For example, arbitrators discharge their duties subject to established procedures and judicial review. Corey, supra, 691 F.2d at 1210. Similarly, the company that contracted with the State of Louisiana to run a prison was subject to contractual and statutory requirements as well as state monitoring and inspection. Citrano, supra, 891 F.Supp. at 315; La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 39:1800.4. The NASD likewise functions subject to the supervision of the Securities and Exchange Commission and within the system of self-regulation established by Congress. Austin Mun. Sec., supra, 757 F.2d at 680. Finally, court-appointed bankruptcy trustees and corporate directors perform their statutorily-defined tasks subject to the court’s scrutiny. Weissman v. Hassett, 47 B.R. 462, 466-67 (S.D.N.Y.1985) (reviewing bankruptcy trustee’s duties under 11 U.S.C.A § 1106); Latt v. Superior Ct., 212 Cal.Rptr. 380, 384 (Ct.App.1985) (discussing role of court-appointed director acting pursuant to Cal. Corp. Code § 308), review granted, 215 Cal.Rptr. 851, 701 P.2d 1169 (1985), review vacated, 223 Cal.Rptr. 266, 713 P.2d 1196 (1986). Contrary to the dissent, the AABB remained a private organization that operated free from procedural safeguards and governmental oversight.
Yet another reason counsels against the dissent’s suggested remand “to the Law Division for a new trial to consider whether AABB acted in bad faith or with malice in refusing to implement the surrogate test.” Post at 323, 676 A.2d at 1063. At no time has the AABB asked for such a remand. The AABB has never *304argued that it is entitled to qualified immunity from liability if it acted in good faith. That argument surfaced for the first time in the brief of amicus curiae American Society of Association Executives. A remand for a retrial under a standard that the AABB never urged would be an injustice to a plaintiff with so tenuous a hold on life.
Similarly, we reject the argument of the American Society of Association Executives that the AABB is immune from tort liability under the New Jersey Tort Claims Act as a “public entity.” N.J.SA 59:1-1 to 12-3. The Act declares that “a public entity is not liable for an injury, whether such injury aries out of an act or omission of the public entity____” N.J.SA 59:2-1. “Public entity” is defined to “include[ ] the State, and any county, municipality, district, public authority, public agency, and any other political subdivision or public body in the State.” N.J.SA 59:1-3. The plain language of the definition of “public entity” excludes the AABB.
Furthermore, the Legislature did not create or authorize the AABB to perform a specific governmental purpose. Nor did the AABB act under contract with or at the direction of a public entity. See Rodriguez v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition Auth., 193 N.J.Super. 39, 45-46, 472 A.2d 146 (App.Div.1983) (finding private security company operating under plan with Sports Authority shares the Authority’s immunity); Cobb v. Waddington, 154 N.J.Super. 11, 18, 380 A.2d 1145 (App.Div.1977), certif. den., 76 N.J. 235, 386 A.2d 859 (1978) (granting immunity to private contractor acting in accordance with Department of Transportation specifications). But see Toumship of E. Brunswick v. Middlesex County Bd. of Freeholders, 224 N.J.Super. 44, 50-51, 539 A.2d 756 (Ch.Div.1987) (finding that independent operator with authority to adopt plans for operation of landfill does not share Department of Environmental Protection’s immunity). The AABB is a private, tax-exempt association created to meet the needs of the blood-banking industry. Merely because it has assumed regulato*305ry authority over that industry does not transform the AABB into a public entity entitled to immunity under the Tort Claims Act.
Reference in the DOH regulations to the AABB standards and inspections, moreover, does not extend state sovereignty to the AABB. In sum, we conclude that the lower courts correctly ruled that the AABB is not immune from liability under the Tort Claims Act, that the AABB owes a duty of ordinary care to persons receiving blood or blood products from its members, and that the AABB breached that duty in this case.
IV
Turning to the issue of charitable immunity, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 provides:
No nonprofit corporation ... organized exclusively for ... charitable, educational or'hospital purposes shall ... be liable to respond in damages to any person who shall suffer damage from the negligence of [the corporation or its agents]; provided, however, that such immunity from liability shall not extend to any person who shall suffer damage from the negligence of such corporation [or its agents] where such person is one unconcerned in and unrelated to and outside of the benefactions of such corporation____
To obtain immunity under the statute, a non-profit corporation must establish that it was organized exclusively for charitable purposes. Heffelfinger v. Town of Morristown, 209 N.J.Super. 380, 383, 507 A.2d 761 (Law Div.1985). In determining whether an organization has a charitable purpose, “[t]he inquiry ... should focus on the essence of the entity itself.” Parker v. St. Stephen’s Urban Dev. Corp., 243 N.J.Super. 317, 327, 579 A.2d 360 (App.Div. 1990).
The AABB performs many useful and socially beneficial functions, but it is not organized and devoted solely to religious, charitable, educational, or hospital purposes. Consequently, the charitable-immunity statute does not apply. Kirby v. Columbian Inst., 101 N.J.Super. 205, 209-10, 243 A.2d 853 (Co.1968). As a trade association, the AABB promotes its interests and those of its dues-paying members. Although society benefits from the activities of the AABB and its members, the AABB’s promotion of its *306members’ interests is not a charitable function. The “essence” of the AABB is devoid of the charitable purpose that the statute requires. Parker, supra, 243 N.J.Super. at 327-28, 579 A.2d 360. Therefore, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 does not protect the AABB from liability for its ordinary negligence.
Y
In resolving this matter, we have been assisted by amicus briefs submitted by several professional associations, including the American Association of Tissue Banks, the American Society of Association Executives, and the College of American Pathologists. Those briefs have enlightened our deliberations, and we are grateful for them. The associations have expressed concern that the imposition of liability on the AABB will inhibit them from conducting research, debating issues, developing guidelines, and communicating with public officials. Although we appreciate that concern, our opinion need not produce that effect. Fairly read, our opinion does not visit liability on the AABB because it was on the wrong side of a scientific debate or because it communicated its concerns to governmental officials.
We recognize, moreover, that the development of tests for infectious diseases often follows an indistinct path fraught with uncertainty, debate, trial and error, and even failure. At some point in the process, however, participants should recognize that they have enough information to act responsibly and that the failure to act would be irresponsible. Professional associations concerned with matters of public health are not fraternal organizations that exist solely for the benefit of their members. Playing a vital role in the protection of health, these associations are inescapably imbued with a public interest. The associations’ commitment to public health should not immunize them from liability for the negligent discharge of their obligations. Nor should the associations enjoy immunity when they stubbornly reject persuasive evidence, unreasonably prolong the debate, and fail to inform their constituents of threats to the public health.
*307The record reveals that the AABB led the charge against direct questioning of donors and surrogate testing. Viewed most favorably to the AABB, the evidence suggests that it was concerned that such questioning and testing would be of limited effectiveness and could diminish the supply of blood and blood products. A less favorable view suggests that the AABB resisted surrogate testing because it did not want to suffer the added inconvenience and costs of such testing. In assessing the role of governmental and private decisionmakers involved with donor screening, the Committee concluded “that it was reasonable to require blood banks to implement these two screening procedures [screening male donors for a history of sexual activity with other males and screening donated blood for the anti-HBc antibody] in January 1983.” IOM Report, supra, at 6.
On the record, the jury could have concluded that the AABB in 1984 unreasonably resisted recognizing that blood transmits HIV. That resistance led the AABB to sacrifice an uncontaminated supply of blood for one that was contaminated, but more readily available. The jury could have found that if the AABB had not been so intransigent, its members, particularly the BCBC, would have instituted surrogate testing. Further, the jury could have found that if the BCBC had instituted surrogate testing, it would have rejected Unit 29F0784. Rejecting that unit could have prevented the transfusion of contaminated blood to William Snyder. It could have saved his health and his life. Against this background, we believe that the imposition of liability on the AABB is both fair and reasonable.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.