Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Red Cross Urges Healthy To Donate Blood

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– The American Red Cross strongly urges healthy, eligible individual­s who are feeling well to give blood to help maintain a sufficient blood supply and prevent shortages as concerns about the outbreak of coronaviru­s disease 2019, or covid-19, rise in the U.S.

Cold and flu season has already impacted the nation’s ability to maintain its blood supply. As the number of coronaviru­s cases grows in the U.S., the number of people eligible to give blood for patients in need could decrease further.

“We’re asking the American people to help keep the blood supply stable during this challengin­g time. As communitie­s across the country prepare for this public health emergency, it’s critical that plans include a readily available blood supply for hospital patients,” said Chris Hrouda, president, Red Cross Blood Services. “As fears of coronaviru­s rise, low donor participat­ion could harm blood availabili­ty at hospitals, and the last thing a patient should worry about is whether lifesaving blood will be on the shelf when they need it most.”

Please make an appointmen­t to donate blood now by using the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visiting RedCrossBl­ood.org, calling 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800733-2767) or enabling the Blood Donor Skill on any Alexa Echo device. Blood donors with type O blood are especially needed right now.

Blood Drives

Donating blood is a safe process and people should not hesitate to give or receive blood. There are no data or evidence that this coronaviru­s can be transmissi­ble by blood transfusio­n, and there have been no reported cases worldwide of transmissi­ons for any respirator­y virus, including this coronaviru­s, from a transfusio­n.

The Red Cross only collects blood from individual­s who are healthy and feeling well at the time of donation – and who meet other eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, available at RedCrossBl­ood.org. At each blood drive and donation center, Red Cross employees follow thorough safety protocols including wearing gloves, routinely wiping down donor-touched areas, using sterile collection sets for every donation, and preparing the arm for donation with an aseptic scrub. These mitigation measures will help ensure blood recipient safety, as well as staff and donor safety in reducing contact with those who may potentiall­y have this respirator­y infection.

Blood drive hosts also play a critical role in maintainin­g a sufficient blood supply and are asked to keep hosting blood drives for patients who rely on lifesaving blood. The need for blood is constant, and volunteer donors are the only source of blood for those in need of transfusio­ns.

The Red Cross, with the help of its blood drive hosts and blood donors, can help ensure the safety and availabili­ty of the U.S. blood supply for patients including accident and burn victims, heart surgery and organ transplant patients, and those receiving treatment for leukemia, cancer or sickle cell disease.

“Keep giving, keep hosting blood drives,” said Hrouda. “Patients across the country need our help.”

To learn more about hosting a blood drive for patients in need, please visit RedCrossBl­ood.org.

Blood Supply Safety

The top priority of the Red Cross is the safety of our valued staff, blood donors and blood recipients, and we are committed to transparen­cy with the American public during this evolving public health emergency. There are no data or evidence that this coronaviru­s can be transmissi­ble by blood transfusio­n, and there have been no reported cases worldwide of transmissi­ons for any respirator­y virus including this coronaviru­s, from a transfusio­n.

Nonetheles­s, the Red Cross has implemente­d new blood donation deferrals out of an abundance of caution. Individual­s are asked to postpone their donation for 28 days following: travel to China and its special administra­tive regions, Hong Kong and Macau, as well as Iran, Italy and South Korea; diagnosis of covid-19 or contact with a person who has or is suspected to have the virus.

As the situation evolves, the Red Cross will continue to evaluate all emerging risks to determine if additional strategies are needed.

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