Times Colonist

As surgeries resume, blood supply draining

-

OTTAWA — Canadian Blood Services says the resumption of elective surgeries following months of COVID-19 lockdown is putting a worrisome drain on the national blood supply.

The number of donors that can be accepted at blood clinics is limited to respect physicaldi­stancing restrictio­ns.

Donations had initially dropped about 20 per cent because of concerns about the novel coronaviru­s and, with the suspension of elective surgeries, the demand for blood was down about 15 per cent.

The agency has been able to keep pace with demand until now.

“It’s a return to a new normal,” said Peter MacDonald, director of donor relations.

“What we’ve seen in the last couple of weeks is hospital demand has started to return to pre-COVID levels with the restrictio­ns being lifted as provinces have started to open up. There’s now a backlog of elective surgeries that might require blood and blood products.”

About 400,000 of Canada’s 37 million residents give blood on a regular basis. Canadian Blood Services operates a national inventory that allows products to be regularly shifted around the country to meet hospital and patient needs. But the inventory has a shelf life — a year for frozen plasma, 42 days for red blood cells and five days for platelets — so the supply is no longer meeting demand.

MacDonald said O-negative blood is already showing a shortage with other types not far behind.

“We’re starting this week with a little over 18,000 units in the national inventory and our goal is to run it with between 20,000 and 24,000. We’re a little under right now.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada