π©Έ Complete Guide (Blood Centres) as per National Blood Policy
In India, thousands of patients need blood every day β for accidents, surgeries, cancer treatment, and childbirth.
Yet many people ask:
π βWhy is blood not available instantly?β
π βWhy do hospitals ask for donors?β
π βWhy are charges taken if blood is donated free?β
β οΈ The answers lie in understanding how these Centres actually work in India.
This article explains:
- β Complete Blood Centre process
- β Government rules (National Blood Policy)
- β Why shortages happen
- β What to do during emergency
π§ What is a Blood Centre?
A Blood Centre is a licensed medical facility that:
βοΈ Collects blood from donors
βοΈ Tests it for safety
βοΈ Separates it into components
βοΈ Stores it properly
βοΈ Supplies it to hospitals
π Blood Centres are strictly regulated in India.
π Step-by-Step: How These Centres Work
Understanding this process helps you avoid panic during emergencies.
π©Έ Step 1: Blood Donation
- Voluntary donors donate blood
- Donation camps & hospitals collect blood
π One donation = can save up to 3 lives
π¬ Step 2: Testing & Screening
Every unit is tested for:
- HIV
- Hepatitis B & C
- Malaria
- Other infections
β οΈ Unsafe blood is discarded immediately
π§ͺ Step 3: Component Separation
Blood is divided into:
- Red Blood Cells (RBC)
- Plasma
- Platelets
π This allows one unit to help multiple patients
βοΈ Step 4: Storage
Each component has different storage conditions:
- RBC: Up to 35β42 days
- Platelets: Only 5 days
- Plasma: Up to 1 year
β οΈ This is why fresh donations are always needed
π₯ Step 5: Issue to Patient
Blood is given based on:
- Blood group matching
- Doctorβs requirement
- Availability
π Hospitals coordinate with these Centres
β οΈ Why Blood is Not Always Available
β 1. Blood Cannot Be Manufactured
π It only comes from human donors
β 2. Short Shelf Life
- Platelets expire in 5 days
β 3. Demand is Unpredictable
- Accidents
- Surgeries
- Emergencies
β 4. Lack of Regular Donors
π Many people donate only once
πΈ Why Do These Centres Charge Money?
β οΈ Important Fact:
π Blood is NOT sold in India (as per National Blood Policy)
β Then What Are These Charges?
These Centres charge only for:
- Testing & screening
- Processing
- Storage
- Staff & equipment
π These are called processing charges
π« Replacement Donation β Reality vs Policy
π As per Policy:
π 100% voluntary donation is recommended
β οΈ In Reality:
- Many hospitals still ask for replacement donors
- Reason: shortage of voluntary blood supply
π‘ Important Understanding:
π Replacement donation is a system gap, not legal requirement
β οΈ Ground Reality: Why Voluntary Blood Donation Camps Are Still Limited
It has been observed in many regions that:
π Some hospitals with Blood Centres or standalone Blood Centres
π Do not actively conduct regular outdoor voluntary blood donation camps
π€ Why Does This Happen?
One of the practical reasons often seen is:
π Availability of replacement blood donors
When patients are admitted:
- Families are asked to arrange donors
- These donors fulfill immediate blood requirements
- This reduces the pressure on Blood Centres to maintain large voluntary donor pools
β οΈ Understanding the Concern
While this may seem convenient in the short term, it creates challenges:
β No strong culture of regular voluntary donation
β Dependency on patient families during emergencies
β Delays in critical situations
β Inequality β patients without networks suffer more
π What Policy Recommends
As per National Blood Policy (India):
π The goal is:
- 100% voluntary, non-remunerated blood donation
π Replacement donation is not encouraged as a long-term solution
π‘ Why Voluntary Blood Donation Camps Are Important
Regular camps ensure:
βοΈ Stable blood supply
βοΈ Reduced emergency panic
βοΈ Better preparedness during disasters
βοΈ Equal access for all patients
β€οΈ The Way Forward
To improve the system:
π Blood Centres should actively promote:
- Outdoor donation camps
- Awareness programs
- Regular donor networks
π Society should support:
Awareness campaigns
Voluntary donation culture
π¨ What To Do During Blood Emergency
β Step 1: Contact Blood Centres
Check nearby licensed Blood Centres
β Step 2: Arrange Donors
Reach out to:
- Friends & family
- Social groups
- Donor networks
β Step 3: Use Emergency Platforms
π Platforms like JeevanRakshak.org help guide you connect donors quickly
β‘ Step 4: Act Fast
π Delay can risk patient life
β€οΈ Role of JeevanRakshak.org
βοΈ Guide you to Connect donors with patients
βοΈ Guide you how to get verified Blood Centre information
βοΈ Guide you how to Reduce panic & confusion
π Because every second matters
β οΈ Common Mistakes
β Assuming blood is always available
β Waiting till last moment
β Not arranging donors early
π’ Final Conclusion
Blood Centres in India follow a scientific and regulated system, but:
π Supply depends on voluntary donors
π Demand is unpredictable
π Shortages are real
π©Έ Why India Needs a National Blood Act β The Urgent Truth
