In
Latin America and the Caribbean, 45% of blood for transfusions is
obtained through voluntary donation, the safest way to collect blood.
Greater commitment and solidarity are needed to meet the goal of
obtaining all blood from voluntary rather than replacement donors by
2019.
Washington, D.C. (PAHO/WHO) — This year’s
World Blood Donor Day,
June 14,
features the slogan “Share life, give blood" and focuses on how “blood
connects us all.” The 2016 campaign thanks all blood donors and
highlights the solidarity and connection between donors and patients.
Blood and blood components are essential to help people survive a number
of severe health conditions, medical procedures, complex surgeries,
childbirth, and injuries from accidents and disasters. Every voluntary
altruistic blood donation can save as many as three lives.
Research shows that an adequate and reliable supply of safe blood can
only be assured by regular, voluntary, unpaid blood donors. In Latin
America and the Caribbean, just over 45% of the approximately 9.2
million blood units collected for transfusions in 2014 came from
voluntary donors, while the remaining 55% came from replacement donors,
typically relatives or friends who donate blood on an emergency basis to
replace used by a patient.
The percentage of voluntary donation in countries in the Americas has
increased only modestly, by 4 percentage points between 2010 and 2014
(from 41% to 45%). The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) is urging
people to use this year’s campaign as the perfect opportunity to become
regular voluntary blood donors.
“The Member States of the Americas have made great progress toward
ensuring safe and sufficient blood supplies. But we continue to face a
number of challenges,” said PAHO Director Carissa F. Etienne, noting
that in many countries the demand for blood exceeds the available
supply. “It is only by collecting sufficient blood from voluntary unpaid
donors that we can ensure its availability, quality, and safety.”
PAHO estimates that at least 2% of the population must donate blood on a
regular basis if a country is to meet its needs for blood and other
blood components. In Latin America and the Caribbean, blood collection
rates average about 1.5%.
Currently, nine countries and territories of Latin America and the
Caribbean, together with the United States and Canada, obtain their
national blood supplies entirely from unpaid voluntary donors. An
additional seven countries of the Americas have made major progress,
with over 50% voluntary donations. However, other countries in the
region continue to rely on replacement donors.
To help motivate regular donors to continue donating blood and to
encourage healthy people who have never donated to do so, especially
young people, the World Health Assembly in 2004 designated
June 14
as World Blood Donor Day. This year’s campaign draws attention to the
important role that voluntary-donation systems play in encouraging
people to care for one another and to promote community cohesion.
“Community participation is essential to achieving universal access to a
safe, sufficient, and sustainable blood supply that ensures that blood
and blood components are available when and where they are needed,” said
María Dolores Pérez-Rosales, PAHO/WHO regional advisor on blood
services and organ transplants. “We need both the commitment of health
authorities and the solidarity of entire communities, because donating
blood several times a year is a simple act that saves lives.”
PAHO, which serves as Regional Office for the Americas of the World
Health Organization (WHO), is working with its member countries toward
an ambitious but achievable goal: that 100% of blood needed for
transfusions be obtained from voluntary donors by 2019. PAHO’s technical
cooperation promotes voluntary donation through support for training of
health professionals, community education, and blood supply planning,
among other activities.
PAHO also collaborates in implementing quality management programs for
the blood transfusion chain. These programs seek to ensure that all
blood units are screened for transfusion-transmissible infections (e.g.,
HIV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis, and
Trypanosoma cruzi) while
also promoting the rational use of blood and blood components,
strengthening of health surveillance, haemovigilance, risk management,
monitoring, and evaluation.
Ecuador, host country for World Blood Donor Day in the Americas
In recognition of its efforts to improve blood safety and increase the
number of altruistic donors, Ecuador was selected by PAHO to host World
Blood Donor Day 2016 in the Americas. Ecuador increased voluntary blood
donation from 38% in 2010 to 60% in 2014.
The commemorative event will be held in Portoviejo, one of the cities
most severely affected by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck
Ecuador last March. Portoviejo was selected by the Ecuadorian
authorities to demonstrate the importance of having a well-organized
national blood service to ensure an adequate blood supply when natural
disasters strike. Special activities for the day will include a “social
circus” to raise public awareness through social interaction and
messages that promote a culture of voluntary blood donation.
Blood donation in Latin America and the Caribbean (data for 2014)
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9,252,583 blood units collected.
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45.39% voluntary donations.
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54.52% donations from replacement donors.
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0.09% remunerated donations.
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14.84 blood donations per 1000 population in Latin America and the Caribbean (11.7 is the average for middle-income countries).
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11 countries
and territories of the Americas obtain 100% from voluntary blood
donors: Cuba and Nicaragua in Latin America; Aruba, Bermuda, Cayman
Islands, Curaçao, French Overseas Departments, Montserrat, and Suriname
in the Caribbean; and Canada and the United States in North America.
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7 other countries
and territories collect over 50% from voluntary blood donors: Brazil,
Colombia, Costa Rica, and Ecuador in Latin America; and Guyana, Haiti,
and Saint Lucia in the Caribbean.