Blood transfusions form a network of integral medical processes for trauma, surgical interventions, and management of chronic diseases all over the world. Nonetheless, different infrastructures in different countries tailor recruitment of donors and policy execution, guaranteeing a safe, sufficient, and equitable blood supply, continue to be challenged. This study examined international blood transfusion policies: donor systems, clinical procedures, safety standards, and pre-transfusion testing guidelines, backed by such key health organizations as AABB and the World Health Organization. Important areas of concern include the incidence of transfusion-transmissible infections (TTIs), the encouragement of voluntary non-remunerated blood donation (VNRBD), the imposition of stringent transfusion practices, and the imposition of laboratory testing before transfusion. Evidence-based suggestions will be put forward towards improving global standards for blood safety and availability using data from PubMed and other reliable sources.
Amal Joudeh (Tue,) studied this question.
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