In COVID hangover, as more around world get vaccinated, fewer give blood
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[August 20, 2021]
By Sangmi Cha
SEOUL (Reuters) - From Seoul to Paris, and
Moscow to Bangkok, concerned citizens are lining up for shots as
COVID-19 case numbers swell. That may ease pressure on stretched
hospitals around the world, but with it comes a hangover - a severe
shortage of blood donors.
A number of countries don't allow people who have just been vaccinated
to give blood, as well as banning those in recovery from coronavirus.
With others simply staying home as new infections rise , doctors say
donor pools have shrunk to alarmingly low levels, menacing urgent
operations.
In South Korea, now grappling with record cases , donors can't give
blood for seven days after a COVID-19 shot - and supply is down to just
3.2 days, as of Wednesday, from 6.5 days' worth this time last year,
according to the Korean Red Cross.
The Korean Medical Association (KMA) has launched a blood drive,
starting with doctors themselves, warning that patients in need of
urgent surgery or transfusions could face emergency situations, KMA
spokeswoman Park Soo-hyun told Reuters.
"There have been increasing times when hospitals notify us of
postponement of surgeries or treatments and crowding due to lack of
blood," Park said.
Recurrent waves of infections, driven by the highly transmissible Delta
variant, and extension of lockdowns have started taking a bigger toll on
donations, according to a Reuters review of the situation in different
countries.
In Thailand, confirmed cases topped 1 million on Friday with authorities
reporting record increases in deaths in recent weeks.
"Due to the COVID situation, not many people are donating blood so there
is not enough and some surgeries have to be postponed," said Piya
Kiatisewi, a bone caner surgeon at Lerdsin Hospital in Bangkok.
'SEPTEMBER WORRIES'
Like South Korea, Russia prohibits blood donations from the fully
vaccinated - but for a whole month, not just seven days. It also doesn't
accept blood from those in the middle of COVID-19 vaccination cycle.
The Kommersant business daily reported last week that donor activity in
Russia has slumped, hit by the vaccination campaign, with blood service
workers in six different regions reporting the problem to the paper.
To be sure, in western Europe concerns over vaccination-hit donations
have been exacerbated by the traditional summer holiday period.
France's blood supply agency, the Etablissement Francais du Sang (EFS),
said stocks were too tight for comfort. It said there are 85,000 red
blood cell bags in reserve, below a comfortable level of 100,000 or
more.
"No sick person will miss out on a transfusion but we are worried for
September," an EFS spokesperson told Reuters, when the volume of
surgical operations would typically increase.
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A nurse collects samples at a blood donation centre during the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Lausanne,
Switzerland, March 29, 2021. Picture taken with a fisheye lens.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
In Italy, the National Blood Centre said there were
worrying shortages in a number of regions, including Lazio, centred
on the capital Rome, which had led some hospitals to postpone
planned operations to conserve stocks for emergencies. It blamed the
shortfall mainly on many people being away on holiday and a lack of
staff in some collection centres.
'AFRAID TO DONATE'
Across Europe, donation levels have also been plagued by uncertainty
over whether people can give blood if they have not been vaccinated,
officials in various countries said. Spain's Health Ministry, for
instance, issued a call for donations this week, telling people it's
safe to donate during the pandemic.
In Greece, "People are afraid to go and donate blood to hospitals
because of the coronavirus", said Konstantinos Stamoulis, scientific
director of Hellenic National Blood Center in Athens. "There are
days when there is a reduction of up to 50% in blood donations
compared to 2019," he said.
Back in Asia, many countries are now facing their most severe
outbreak of coronavirus so far amid the Delta variant surge.
In Vietnam, the country's National Institute of Hematology and Blood
Transfusion said it could meet only 50-70% of demand.
"We haven't been able to deploy mobile donor centres," said Le Hoang
Oanh, head of the blood transfusion centre of Cho Ray Hospital in Ho
Chi Minh City, Vietnam's coronavirus epicentre.
"Instead, we have to call for donors to go to our permanent centres,
which is a challenge given the movement restrictions in the city."
(This story corrects abbreviation of France's Etablissement Francais
du Sang to EFS from EFA)
(Reporting by Sangmi Cha in Seoul; Additional reporting by Polina
Nikolskaya in Moscow, Khanh Vu in Hanoi, Chayut Setboonsarng in
Bangkok, Andrei Khalip in Madrid, Lefteris Papadimas in Athens,
Richard Lough in Paris and Crispian Balmer in Rome; Editing by
Miyoung Kim and Kenneth Maxwell)
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