WHO says voluntary unpaid blood donations must
increase rapidly
Voluntary, unpaid blood
donations must be increased rapidly in more than half the
world’s countries in order to ensure a reliable supply of safe blood for
patients whose lives depend on it, according to the World Health Organisation
(WHO). The WHO has urged all the countries to establish blood services based on
full voluntary non-remunerated blood donations. According to the WHO, today
only 62 countries get close to 100 per cent of their national blood supplies
from voluntary unpaid blood donations, with 34 countries still dependent on
family donors and even paid donors for more than 75 per cent of their blood
supply. ‘Although we have many external differences, the same vital blood pumps
through all our veins. Voluntary, unpaid blood donation is the act of giving
life – the greatest gift any person can give or receive,’ said Margaret Chan,
WHO Director-General.
The theme of the World Blood Donation Day, which is June
14, is ‘Blood connects us all’. The theme has been chosen to highlight the
common bond that all people share in their blood. About 108 million blood
donations are collected globally every year. Nearly 50 per cent of these blood
donations are collected in high-income countries, home to less than 20 per cent
of the world’s population. An adequate supply can only be assured through regular
donations by voluntary, unpaid blood donors.
Statement from WHO also said that regular voluntary unpaid
blood donors are the foundation of a safe blood supply because they are
associated with low levels of infection that can be transmitted by
transfusions, including HIV and hepatitis viruses. ‘Around the world, 25
countries are unable to screen all donated blood for one or more of these
infections due to irregular supply of test kits, staff shortages, poor quality
test kits, or lack of basic quality in laboratories,’ said the statement.
‘Voluntary blood donors come from all walks of life but they have one thing
incommon: they put others before themselves – people they don’t even know,’
said Ed Kelley, Director of the Department of Service Delivery and Safety at
WHO.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
14.06.2016
A clever
person solves a problem,
a wise person
avoids it
Albert
Einstein
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