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A directed donation is a donation
made for a specific recipient. Through directed
donations, recipients can receive blood from family
members and friends. While no medical evidence exists
that shows directed blood donations are safer than
donations from the community blood supply, some
recipients may feel more comfortable selecting their own
donors. Directed donations may not be appropriate for
emergency procedures since it takes time to fully test
and process each unit of blood.
Central Blood Bank is the link between donors giving on
a patient’s behalf and the hospital where the
transfusion will occur. If a physician recommends and/or
a patient prefers to receive directed donations, Central
Blood Bank makes every effort to collect, test, process,
and distribute the blood units to the hospital for
surgery.
It is the patient recipient’s responsibility, or they
may select a representative, to schedule directed
donation appointments and ensure that these recruited
donors keep their appointments. Central Blood Bank
schedulers cannot call directed donors to ensure that
they come in to donate.
Directed donations are made by appointment only and can
be donated at any of our community donor centers (link).
Before donating, directed donors and recipients must
follow a simple protocol
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Patients must obtain a prescription from their
physician. It must include the patient’s name, type and
screen for directed donation, type and amount of blood
product(s), date required, and hospital where the blood
product(s) should be sent.
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Donors can call Central Blood Bank's Special Donations
office to schedule the directed donation. We need to
know the patient’s blood type. If the patient doesn’t
know his or her blood type, a typing will be ordered by
a physician, which can be performed at a hospital’s
transfusion service or at an independent/affiliates lab.
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Patients can obtain confirmed blood type by calling
Special Donations at: 1-800-310-9552, 48 hours after a
sample has been drawn.
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Patients need to recruit family members and friends for
the required number of blood products needed. It is
important to recruit extra donors since some of the
selected donors may not have a compatible blood type, or
may be ineligible to donate. The chart below can help
donors select individuals with the proper blood type.
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If the patient’s blood type is: |
Donors blood type must be: |
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O+ |
O+ or O- |
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A+ |
A+, A-, O+ or O- |
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B+ |
B+, B-, O+ or O- |
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AB+ |
All blood types |
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O- |
O- |
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A- |
A- or O- |
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B- |
B- or O- |
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AB- |
AB-, A-, B- or AB- |
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After the donors have been recruited, the selected
donors must call Central Blood Bank’s Special Donations
Office to schedule their blood donation
appointment. When the blood donor calls, he/she will
need the name of the patient and the hospital in which
the patient will be treated.
All directed donors must meet the same strict regulatory
requirements set by the Food and Drug Administration for
the general blood supply. Any directed donation that
does not meet the regulatory requirements will be
destroyed. Directed donors must also meet the same
criteria as general blood donors regarding prior health
history and high-risk activities. Directed donors will
be deferred from giving based upon the standard
regulatory requirements for blood donation.
If directed donations meet all the safety requirements
and for some reason, such as a change in the date for
surgery, cannot be used for the intended patients, those
units of blood may be used in the community blood
supply. This is done so the precious resource benefits a
patient.
Central Blood Bank’s Special Donations coordinators are
available to answer questions and make appointments for
autologous and
directed donations. The
telephone number is 412-209-7020, or toll free at
1-800-310-9552.
Special
Donations Office Hours:
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Monday-Thursday |
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8:00 am –
5:00 pm |
| Friday
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8:00 am –
4:00 pm |
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