Vote now! 2009 Medical Weblog Awards best weblog
   
Wednesday Nov 11 2009 Health Policy

Should the U.S. create a national blood transfusion reporting system?

By Lia Steakley

blood donation.jpg

Here's a shocking discovery: the United States is one of the only developed countries not to have a national blood transfusion reporting and safety system.

Such a system could improve the safety of transfusions by monitoring adverse reactions or tracking blood supplies that are potentially tainted because a donor later became ill with an infectious disease, reports the Wall Street Journal's Health Blog.

Matthew J. Kuehnert, who oversees blood safety issues at CDC, told the Health Blog that most transfusion reactions don’t have to be reported at all, “and even the most serious transfusion reactions are underreported, possibly because of the threat of punishment.” A public health surveillance system “would operate with the goal of quality improvement, with each facility looking at its own data and sharing it confidentially,” Dr. Kuehnert says.

Two pilot programs, a collaborative project between the federal government and health organizations, and another effort involving nine hospitals, are testing the feasibility and effectiveness of an Internet-based reporting system.

Photo by The US Army

  •  

    Share Via...

    • email Email
    • del.icio.us Del.icio.us
    • Facebook Facebook
    • Digg
    • Twitter Twitter

Comments

RichardT

November 11, 2009 2:44 PM

I think this is unacceptable.
The safety of blood is of paramount importance - no corners should be cut.

I was reading the same WSJ article about this and the one about the flu affecting the blood supply (and maybe transmitted that way as well)
There is also some recent news about the discovery of another retrovirus called XMRV, which seems to have links to prostate cancers & Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Like other retroviruses it would also be transmitted in the same ways, which include blood.

RT.

Add a Comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

Stanford Medicine Resources: