Giving Blood - The Facts
Posted: Wed 20 Jul 2016 9:29 am
As a result of my successful appeal for platelets many questions were asked (on the forum, on the phone, in emails, in SMS) about giving blood. I went to the Blood Bank and these are the facts as they gave them:-
There are 3 blood banks who act as 1 in terms of swapping supplies as necessary. They are Lefkosa, Girne & Famagusta. Girne & Famagusta are open for donations between 8am and 3pm Monday to Friday. Lefkosa is open 24/7 and will never refuse a donation.....HOWEVER they greatly prefer you attend between 8am and 10pm as their reduced staffing levels at other hours may mean a donor can have a long wait if the staff are busy.
The minimum age for giving blood is 19. The maximum (for men or women) is 67 if you are a regular donor or 60 for first time donors. Men can give blood again after 3 months, women after 4 months. In addition, people between 68 and 70 can also give blood but only once per year.
Blood can be kept for 1 month and the greatest demand is for type A+. The blood is supplied wherever it is needed including the private hospitals although Near East have their own blood bank.
The biggest question is medications. It is too complicated to address here but you are advised to check before a possibly wasted journey. You can call the Lefkosa Hospital 0392 228 5441 and extensions 1070 or 1071 to reach the blood bank - they can tell you if your medication is acceptable or not. It is best to call between 8am and 2 pm and ask for Ozge (pronounced Ozger) - she speaks excellent English and is very knowledgeable about medications. Many are, more than I would have suspected, so please check and don't assume you are excluded, e.g., all the following are acceptable:-
Thyroid treatments
Blood Pressure treatments (provided blood pressure is stable at time of donation)
Aspirin/Paracetemol
Hormones
even anti-biotics provided the course has been complete for 1 week.
Also Diabetics are acceptable provided their blood sugar is stable at the time of donation - Glucophage is an acceptable medication.
When you arrive you will fill in a form and they then conduct 'typing' (O, A etc.) and blood tests. You then get into a nice comfortable recliner and they insert a needle into your arm and take the blood. The whole process from arrival to departure takes 20 minutes at Lefkosa (they couldn't answer for the other 2 ) - hard to believe but they insist that is the reality.[/color]
The Blood Bank never has enough and all donations will always be welcomed. Please think about doing this - 20 minutes is not much of your time to help others and maybe save a life.
If you do give then please quote "Kibkom Appeal" so they know where is the power!
There are 3 blood banks who act as 1 in terms of swapping supplies as necessary. They are Lefkosa, Girne & Famagusta. Girne & Famagusta are open for donations between 8am and 3pm Monday to Friday. Lefkosa is open 24/7 and will never refuse a donation.....HOWEVER they greatly prefer you attend between 8am and 10pm as their reduced staffing levels at other hours may mean a donor can have a long wait if the staff are busy.
The minimum age for giving blood is 19. The maximum (for men or women) is 67 if you are a regular donor or 60 for first time donors. Men can give blood again after 3 months, women after 4 months. In addition, people between 68 and 70 can also give blood but only once per year.
Blood can be kept for 1 month and the greatest demand is for type A+. The blood is supplied wherever it is needed including the private hospitals although Near East have their own blood bank.
The biggest question is medications. It is too complicated to address here but you are advised to check before a possibly wasted journey. You can call the Lefkosa Hospital 0392 228 5441 and extensions 1070 or 1071 to reach the blood bank - they can tell you if your medication is acceptable or not. It is best to call between 8am and 2 pm and ask for Ozge (pronounced Ozger) - she speaks excellent English and is very knowledgeable about medications. Many are, more than I would have suspected, so please check and don't assume you are excluded, e.g., all the following are acceptable:-
Thyroid treatments
Blood Pressure treatments (provided blood pressure is stable at time of donation)
Aspirin/Paracetemol
Hormones
even anti-biotics provided the course has been complete for 1 week.
Also Diabetics are acceptable provided their blood sugar is stable at the time of donation - Glucophage is an acceptable medication.
When you arrive you will fill in a form and they then conduct 'typing' (O, A etc.) and blood tests. You then get into a nice comfortable recliner and they insert a needle into your arm and take the blood. The whole process from arrival to departure takes 20 minutes at Lefkosa (they couldn't answer for the other 2 ) - hard to believe but they insist that is the reality.[/color]
The Blood Bank never has enough and all donations will always be welcomed. Please think about doing this - 20 minutes is not much of your time to help others and maybe save a life.
If you do give then please quote "Kibkom Appeal" so they know where is the power!