SANBS is not a blood bank

Blood donors donate blood to save a life, but should they pay when on the receiving end of a blood transfusion?

Many regular blood donors have raised this question and have asked why, if they donate regularly, should they pay for blood when they need it?

Gerrie Smith from Welgedacht is a voluntary unpaid blood donor who feels the organisation shouldn’t charge regular donors for transfusions.

“The fees paid in hospitals are a fee for the service,” says Vanessa Raju, SANBS communications manager.

The SANBS is a non-profit organisation that receives no funding and to collect, test and get the blood to patients, carries a huge cost.

Vanessa says it is this cost that is attached to blood products, which a patient pays for should they need it.

Blood donors are the foundation of a safe, sustainable blood supply and play a vital role in assuring the availability of stable and sufficient supplies of safe blood for transfusion.

“In a country with such high infections like HIV, we have state-of-the-art testing and this alone comes at a cost of R500 000 a day to operate,” she says.

The organisation operates within a guideline set by the World Health Organisation of voluntary donation, and by 2020 all countries around the world are targeted to follow this model.

Another question raised by Gerrie is why regular donors can’t donate and store or bank the blood at the SANBS.

Due to the lifespan of blood, when separated, platelets last for five days, red cells 42 days and plasma can be frozen for up to three years.

“Hence we do not like to be referred to as a blood bank, as you cannot collect ahead and be ready for the bad times,” she adds.

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