52% intelligent. 9% modest. More monkey than bear.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

blood runs through our veins....

In the UK, you don't get paid to donate blood. This means that everyone who donates is not only giving up their precious and much needed blood, but they are also willingly donating their time. This is probably a legacy of coming from a medical family, but I think it is a fantastic thing to do and I have happily been submitting myself to the National Blood Service's needles since I was eighteen years old. That means that - barring the mandatory break of a year after I got my tattoo - I have been giving blood for 14 years.

My blood type is A Rh+. This is good for two reasons:

1) It is the second most common blood type (after O+) and occurs in 35% of the population. This means that it is always in demand and that it is especially important to donate regularly. This makes me feel good about donating it: I know it's not likely to be hanging around for long or to ultimately go to waste. Apparently about half of the people needing blood at any one time need this type....

2) The fact that it is so common means that if I unlucky enough to need a donation, then hopefully it shouldn't be too hard to find someone with the same blood type (and yes, I do realise that the two points are slightly paradoxical!)

The whole donation process takes about 30 minutes, and because they bring their van to my office, it provides a welcome opportunity to escape from my desk three times a year and have a sit down and a nice cup of tea. Oh, and to donate a pint or so of something that costs me nothing and might just be useful to someone else.

I've just got a letter through the post that's put a stop to all that:

"Unfortunately, according to our rather strict criteria, you are not eligible to donate blood. I have therefore withdrawn your name from our panel of donors. If your situation changes, please contact us again and we may be able to reinstate you.....etc."

I reported the WTs to them about a year ago, and because they are quite rightly cautious about the blood that they take from people, they put me on hold whilst they investigated what to do with me.... and now I know. I have a neurological disorder of some kind that remains essentially undiagnosed. You wouldn't have thought that this would affect my blood, but you really can't be too careful can you?

So that's that.

I know that it probably shouldn't, but this makes me feel a bit shitty: one more little way in which this thing has affected my life.



Curse you WTs!

15 Comments:

  • At 8:48 pm, Blogger Flash said…

    You can rest safe in the knowledge that you did your bit though, eh?
    Unlike some people..ooh, erm , gotta go!

     
  • At 9:34 pm, Blogger Erika said…

    I've been on the blacklist ever since I lived in your fair country. Seems the Canadian medical system considers six months the maximum amount of time one can be exposed to the potential for Mad Cow without the odds of actually having it be non-threatening. I am banned from donating for the undetermined future on those grounds.

    My point is that these restrictions are tight, unapologetic, and merciless, and are basically for the Just In Case rather than the In All Probability. It has nothing to do with you, and speaks nothing about whatever is dickering with your body.

     
  • At 9:54 pm, Blogger Lazygal said…

    Ditto for the US. Even though I lived in the UK in the 1980s, I'm barred from giving because of Mad Cow fears. Go figure.

     
  • At 11:08 pm, Blogger Ben said…

    That's a bugger. I've only donated twice, and it's high time I went again. Wouldn't have gone through it if my girlfriend hadn't coaxed / coerced me into it, to be honest, but it did feel good walking out knowing I'd done something decent.

    The way she puts it makes a lot of sense: adulthood brings certain privileges (drinking, the vote etc) but it also entails certain responsibilities, one of which should be to contribute to society - and that's where giving blood comes in.

     
  • At 1:13 am, Blogger LB said…

    they won't let me give blood either because of my dodgy thyroid thingummy.

    (or that fact that last time I did go I sat down afterwards to have my tea and biscuit and fainted and woke up a little later feeling quite groggy)

     
  • At 1:20 am, Blogger HistoryGeek said…

    Damn! I'm sorry about that. I'm officially not able to give blood because I work at a dialysis facility (I also have to have a Hep B titre every year to make sure my body is still fielding protective antibodies for the same reason).

     
  • At 4:38 am, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I've been on a ban for nearly six months for a minor waterworks problem and am looking forward to donating again soon (not really, I'm very scared of needles). I've had to stop twice before for medical reasons and am happy that if I needed a transfusion it would be safe for those reasons.
    However, it does annoy me that some of my friends that are in long standing homosexual relationships are banned from donating, no matter how many tests they undergo.

     
  • At 10:26 am, Blogger John McClure said…

    "A pint? That's very nearly an armful!"

    Last time I checked, I couldn't donate because I'd too recently (and for too long) lived in South Africa, but that was a long time ago. I should check again.

    I checked again. I would seem I'm risky not because of where I lived but because of what I did when I lived there.

     
  • At 1:26 pm, Blogger Jenni said…

    If the WTs don't start playing nice soon, I'm coming over there to kick the crap out of them. So there.

     
  • At 4:48 pm, Blogger -L said…

    That's ok, ST. It's not your fault you can't donate. Maybe you can find another cause to donate a bit of time or energy to.

    I always enjoyed donating blood...well, until my plasma-giving days of college when the needle was inserted into my arm wrong, and my skin ballooned to the size of a golf ball, leaving my entire arm to look as if someone had taken a baseball bat to it (it was quite disgusting!)! I really should go do it again soon though. Thanks for the reminder!

     
  • At 5:46 pm, Blogger Erika said…

    God, no wonder they're always clamouring for blood! Looking at our little sampling here, look how many of us CAN'T donate even if we wanted to. Sad.

     
  • At 8:34 pm, Blogger Ali said…

    Hey Swissty, don't feel bad! You have done your bit - who knows how many lives you have saved? Thank you.

    (((swiss)))

     
  • At 8:45 pm, Blogger swisslet said…

    Just for future reference, and in case anyone was wondering, "wanderingscribe" who comments above is not the same person as "Wandering Scribe" who has just landed herself a book deal and is hopefully well on her way to getting out of her car and into some proper accommodation.

    Apparently going to moderated comments has left some of the real WS's "fans" looking to find another outlet for their hate.

    I am not amused. Future comments will be deleted.

    ST

     
  • At 1:11 am, Blogger adem said…

    Hey I'm A+ too!!! Sadly I seem to have dwindled out of donating after being quite a regular. Yet another thing I must et back into doing.

     
  • At 12:35 pm, Blogger old enough to moan said…

    I have been prevented from donating blood since being diagnosed with cancer in 1992 – I did receive many a pint whilst in hospital though, thank you Swiss and all others like ourselves who have given in the past.

     

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