Of course I am a blood donor! All those blood fractions that the GB have approved have to come from somewhere - I am doing my bit. I have also registered as a bone marrow donor.
On the subject raised by DY, the National Blood Service in the UK has released the following statement:
News Release following the Secretary of State for Health, John Reid??s statement to the House of Commons
John Reid, the Secretary of State for Health, has today made a statement to the House of Commons concerning the UK blood supply and the unknown risk of vCJD being transmitted by blood. The statement was made following news that a patient with vCJD who recently died had received a blood transfusion six years previously from a donor who developed vCJD, three years after making the donation.
The National Blood Service (NBS) would first wish to extend it?s sympathies to the family and friends of the recipient involved in this case, who received a blood transfusion during surgery for a serious illness.
The transfusion took place in 1996, prior to various precautionary measures around vCJD being implemented. This is a single incident and it is impossible to be sure of the route of infection. However, the possibility of vCJD being transmitted by blood cannot be discounted.
The NBS has recently been publicising a campaign to encourage regular, new and lapsed blood donors to give blood in the run up to Christmas. It is vital that donors continue to come forward to donate: to make sure that life saving and life enhancing treatments can continue.
The Department of Health (DH) along with the NBS and other blood services, medical and scientific experts are continuing to review the current precautions against vCJD and any further precautions that could be implemented.
END
Patient Queries may be directed to NHS DIRECT 0845 4647
For further media information, please contact Rakesh Vasishtha, NBS National Communications Manager (0208 258 2781) or Chris Hartley, NBS Head of Corporate Communications (0192348 6837)
Note to Editors:
The demand for blood never stops. Every day, 9,000 donations of blood are required to help in the treatment of patients across England and North Wales.Giving blood is safe ? you cannot contract vCJD through giving blood.The NBS?s prime concern is always the safety of donors and patients through the quality of blood products. The NBS is continually striving to improve blood safety.The NBS has put in place a number of precautions against the unknown risk of vCJD such as leucodepletion in 1999 (the removal of white cells from blood) and the importation of plasma from the US to make plasma products such as Albumin. In addition, the NBS has recently signed a contract for the supply of US Fresh Frozen Plasma for babies and children born on or after 1 st January 1996.It is important to balance the unknown risk of contracting vCJD through a blood transfusion against the risk of a patient not receiving the blood transfusion they require.I hate to bring facts into the argument, but for the sake of accuracy - vCJD is NOT "mad cow disease" or BSE. Cows get BSE, people get vCJD.
I think that the final sentence of the statement is well worth considering. No medical procedure is without risk, but in the period in which there have been problems with HIV, Hepatitis and now, sadly, vCJD contaminated blood supply, I am convinced that far, far more people have been helped, and lives saved, than people harmed.
Personally, I still don't eat black pudding - I just don't fancy it. But I admit this is a hang up from my upbringing, I am not about to use fallacious anecdotal evidence of deaths by black pudding, of which no there have been occurences, as my excuse.
I suspect that there is still an over reliance on transfusions as a therapeutic tool in the UK, but with the constant shortage of this expensive resource, this tendency must be changing. I know that the donations I make are saving lives, and could well end up being processed into the fractions which JWs now accept. If I am ever unfortunate enough to need a blood transfusion - I'll take it gladly.
For those of us in the UK - the NBS's website is a great source of information about blood, and how to become a donor.