Blood Donors
Prospective, new, and experienced donors; as well as the phlebotomists and other staff involved with donation welcome!
Resources:
- Find a place to donate
- How to get involved without donating blood
- Donation intervals between different donation types at the American Red Cross
Disclaimer
The information and content found on c/blood_donors is for informational purposes only. This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek advice from your physician or another qualified medical professional if you have questions or are experiencing a medical problem. Consult your physician before taking supplements or changing your diet.
The authors and moderators make no representations or warranties with respect to the quality, accuracy, or completeness of the contents of this community and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. The advice and information contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate.
Typically donors receive paperwork from their donor center after the donation. Keep this paperwork until it is clear you will not experience negative reactions. For non-emergency medical concerns regarding your recent donation, contact your donation center.
If you are having a medical emergency, contact your doctor, go to an emergency center, or contact the emergency number for your country or area (911 in the U.S.).
c/blood_donors is not responsible for the claims or content of external websites that may be linked here. If you see what appears to be misinformation regarding blood donation, please report it to the mods.
view the rest of the comments
facepalm reduced from the donor and increased in the receiver apparently. be nice if the article included how the donations prevented the PFAS from getting to the patient....
if your bleeding out and going into surgery the blood will help more than harm. down the road when you are all tip top you could always give blood yourself. Its a one mans trash is another mans treasure situation.
I doubt it gets filtered out, but it would be interesting to know for sure.
It's a nice side effect to get rid of it as donor. If I was ever in a position to need blood then imminent survival will be priority over PFAS contamination
this is a obvious take. its just an horrifyingly self centered article. 'donate blood because it removes potentially damaging compounds from you! you're a good person by doing so!' its embodies so many things wrong w/ people.
the fact where the pfas go is never mentioned is either: deliberate or the people on the decision making tree for writing and publishing this article are hopelessly self centered as a group. neither is a good thing.
True, it reflects where humanity has gone. I've been donating for nearly 20 years now (in several countries) and sadly I mostly see older people there, some in my age braket (late 30s) and hardly ever anyone young.
To me this one is a case where the end justifies the means. If someone is motivated to donate for purely selfish reasons then that is still a win overall.
If it makes you feel better, I'm under 30, and the mod of this community because although I am no super-donor, I didn't see one and I donate often enough I figured that on the small Fediverse I could mod until someone more qualified showed up.
Nice, thanks for setting it up. I guess it's on us to build places like this one here where ingerested people can ask questions. I should look into organising a blood drive.
https://www.redcrossblood.org/hosting-a-blood-drive/learn-about-hosting/how-hosting-a-blood-drive-works.html can help if you are willing to work with the American Red Cross.
indeed. i also havent seen a blood drive in ages....
Yeah, but the receiver generally tends to have bigger problems to worry about.
Except most people don't give blood their whole lives.