NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Blood bank: Zimbabwe partners Facebook

- BY BRENNA MATENDERE

THE National Blood Service Zimbabwe (NBSZ) yesterday launched a key project to replenish the country’s depleted blood bank in partnershi­p with social media giant Facebook to become the second country in the Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) to achieve the feat.

Kojo Boakye, Facebook Africa public policy director told journalist­s during a virtual Press conference that Zimbabwe after South Africa now had a prestigiou­s applicatio­n that will see blood donors joining the digital platform that helps in the collection of the life-saving liquid.

“The Blood Feature applicatio­n being launched today (yesterday) will be on Facebook. Willing donors from around Zimbabwe can log in and each time the NBSZ makes outreaches in communitie­s to collect blood, notificati­ons are sent out there. The willing blood donors will therefore donate blood in places nearer to them and all schedules that include venues will be posted on that applicatio­n,” he said.

Boakye said outside Sadc, six countries had made similar partnershi­ps with Facebook which have greatly improved blood collection­s.

These are Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Kenya, Egypt, Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal.

Abroad, the United States, Bangladesh, Brazil and India are the only countries with blood applicatio­n.

NBSZ spokespers­on Esther Massundah reiterated that there was need to switch to new ways of blood collection following setbacks created by the COVID-19-induced lockdown that restricts movement of donors.

“COVID-19 has shown the need to come up with more innovative ways of recruiting blood donors in an environmen­t where people are encouraged to stay at home. Traditiona­l marketing methods and strategies are now irrelevant,” she said.

“So our goal is to use the Facebook platform to reach out and recruit blood donors during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic and enhance awareness on the NBSZ blood donation activities which will be taking place at different NBSZ static clinics and mobile collection sites in the community. We hope to land positive coverage for the Zimbabwe blood programme on a global initiative.”

Community Working Group on Health director Itai Rusike said the project would boost blood supplies because most young people who form the majority of donors were on Facebook.

“The youths, who are techno-savvy are Facebook users, so the project will boost collection­s. When we talk about blood we are talking of a critical component of life so the project needs to be supported.

We also urge NBSZ to partner with civic society organisati­ons that work in rural areas so that more blood collection­s can be realised in those areas,” he said.

 ??  ?? Fletcher High School former students pose for a group picture at the burial of a colleague, Brian Mafukidze (inset), in Murombedzi, Zvimba district, on Tuesday. Mafukidze was the proprietor of Netombo Lodges, Netombo Entertainm­ent and operated a number of bottle stores and a fleet of pirate taxis in Mashonalan­d West province. He succumbed to injuries he sustained after being involved in a road accident along the Murombedzi-Chinhoyi Highway on Saturday.
Fletcher High School former students pose for a group picture at the burial of a colleague, Brian Mafukidze (inset), in Murombedzi, Zvimba district, on Tuesday. Mafukidze was the proprietor of Netombo Lodges, Netombo Entertainm­ent and operated a number of bottle stores and a fleet of pirate taxis in Mashonalan­d West province. He succumbed to injuries he sustained after being involved in a road accident along the Murombedzi-Chinhoyi Highway on Saturday.

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