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QtrHrsmn
06-29-2002, 09:51 AM
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The summer slump in blood donations started earlier than usual this year and could lead to dire shortages within weeks, say blood banks that issued an urgent appeal for people to give.

Summer shortages are common as frequent donors go on vacation and school blood drives dry up. But blood banks told the government Thursday that post-Sept. 11 donor apathy and new precautions against mad cow disease are worsening this year's slump.

Almost half of the American Red Cross' blood donor regions and one-third of the nation's independent blood banks have tight supplies - a day's worth or less on hand. The South seems particularly hard hit, said America's Blood Centers, a group that represents independent banks.

The Red Cross provides about half the nation's blood supply and ABC banks provide the other half. Underscoring the urgent need, the two competing groups issued a joint appeal for donors this week.

``A frightening trend is beginning to develop,'' said Dr. Robert Jones of the New York Blood Center, which has seen 13 percent fewer donors this June than a year ago. ``Collections have been dropping off dramatically as of June 1.''

``It's tanked'' since May, agreed the Red Cross' Dr. Peter Page. ``Our problem now is people not coming to donate.''

Some 60 percent of Americans are eligible to donate blood - an individual can give once every two months - but only 5 percent do.

Indeed, a recent survey for The Associated Press found the main reason Americans say they donate is to help after a disaster, even though only blood previously donated and disease-tested actually helps disaster victims.

In fact, 34,000 pints are needed every day. Another poll, announced by blood bankers this week, found only 9 percent of people know blood is needed every two seconds.

``The American public has no clue that blood is perishable,'' Jones said. He urged the government to fund a massive education campaign explaining that critical red blood cells last only 42 days and thus continuous donations are vital.

Jones said lack of understanding contributes to the post-Sept. 11 backlash that's worsening the summer slump. After the terrorist attacks, hundreds of thousands of people donated blood, overwhelming blood banks. Ultimately, tens of thousands of pints went bad before they could be used - and donations subsequently plummeted.

Donor focus groups say they're still angry about wasted blood and are unlikely to respond to new appeals for donations, Jones said.

Blood can be frozen, but the process is extremely difficult and expensive.

Chronically tight supplies lead to periodic shortages that force hospitals to postpone or cancel elective surgeries. So far this year, the American Hospital Association knows of no surgery disruptions. But government monitoring shows ``near misses'' are starting to climb, said Dr. Stephen Nightingale of the Department of Health and Human Services. Those are cases where a blood center can't immediately or completely fill a hospital's order for more pints.

One other factor this summer: new precautions against mad cow disease, just in case the fatal brain disease spread through tainted European beef also might spread through blood.

Tighter Food and Drug Administration rules instituted May 31 required blood banks to turn away more donors who have spent time in Britain or Europe. The Red Cross imposed even stricter mad cow rules in October.

No one knows exactly how many Americans can no longer donate, blood banks told an FDA meeting Thursday - but they're turning away roughly 1 percent of donors at the door. Page said that means rejecting about 3,764 Red Cross donors a month.

That doesn't count people who heard about the new rules and quit trying to donate. A survey of 10,000 donors indicates 3 percent of donors assume they're not eligible anymore, but that number is far larger in cities with lots of retired soldiers, said ABC's Dr. Celso Bianco.

Indeed, 18 percent of active-duty military personnel are disqualified under the mad cow rules, said Maj. Ronny Alford of the Armed Services Blood Program. Anticipating that loss, the military stepped up donor recruitment and actually increased donations by 9 percent over the winter, the only bright spot mentioned Thursday.

To donate blood, call the Red Cross at 1-800-GIVE-LIFE, or ABC at 1-888-USBLOOD. GO GIVE BLOOD!!!! You may need it someday...........

QtrHrsmn
07-01-2002, 11:19 AM
bump

mayaneagle
07-06-2002, 04:08 PM
If I didn't have all these fresh tattoos, I'd give blood!

QtrHrsmn
03-14-2003, 11:59 AM
bump

Rayney
03-14-2003, 12:15 PM
You give blood but not organs Alex? Why is that?

PS. Im anaemic (sp?) I cant give blood :( I want to :( But organs yes :)

Criminal
03-15-2003, 03:34 PM
Could I just donate urine instead?

Monster
03-15-2003, 04:34 PM
Alright, alright, next time there's a blood drive on campus I'll donate. But only b/c I want the cookie. :p

QtrHrsmn
03-15-2003, 04:36 PM
Originally posted by Raynewitch
You give blood but not organs Alex? Why is that?
Because I can make more blood. I can't make more organs.


Originally posted by Criminal
Could I just donate urine instead? No.

beatlebabe
03-15-2003, 05:21 PM
I can't donate blood myself (persons with any kind of liver problems can't donate) but if I could I would do it :) I've needed blood before & my daughter has had numerous transfusions so I know it's needed.

Nick
03-15-2003, 09:37 PM
I've given blood 3 times so far, and will do a fourth time as soon as I get a chance. It has always been through school for me, so that makes it easier.

Plus, Red Cross gives you a nifty little card to carry in your wallet.

jadatrack
03-15-2003, 09:52 PM
do you have to be over 18 to donate blood? if not, i'll go donate in one of those rare occasions that i'm not dying in one way or another...and if so, on my 18th birthday i'll donate (after i buy porn of course)

Nick
03-15-2003, 10:46 PM
Originally posted by jadatrack
do you have to be over 18 to donate blood? if not, i'll go donate in one of those rare occasions that i'm not dying in one way or another...and if so, on my 18th birthday i'll donate (after i buy porn of course)

You have to be over 17, and weigh over 110 pounds. Also, you can't of had any recent tattoos.

QtrHrsmn
03-16-2003, 02:27 AM
I'm somewhere over 25 gallons.... I had to quit for a few years because of going to GW1... but as soon as I was cleared by them, I jumped right back in the game. You CAN give blood every 60 days.


Aside from the tattoos.... If you've been to a third world country, or been exposed to certain diseases... they won't let you donate.

Ponycar_302
03-16-2003, 10:46 PM
I only give blood to get out of work. You give it for free, but what does a hospital charge you per pint when you need it?

jillianjiggs
03-16-2003, 10:57 PM
You know, it's not free to screen the blood, clean it, seperate it, package it, and store it. They tell me I can't give blood. I asked why, and they said "well, you need our blood more than us." I was like, "um, I'm O+, you've got a severe shortage of O+, so um, why do I need it more." The doc paused and said "uh, you just need it more." I lied once and didn't tell them I had behcets while I was in Texas so I could give blood. Don't worry, I'm not contagious or anything. :) I just get ulcers from stress, and the doctors seem to think giving blood will freak me out.

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