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I signed up for platelet donation the last time I was giving blood but they wrote back and said "No need to worry, but you're not suitable".
No need to worry?
Who are they kidding? ๐
Some people's counts are higher than others, yours will be at a safe and normal level you've just not got as many spare as some have.
I stopped as mine had dropped for a few donations in a row + was going travelling. I'll get re-tested they might have gone up, they might not have, they fluctuate naturally.
If they're not up I'll do whole bloody, if they're up then I'll do Platelets.
I can't give Platelets because I'm too 'compact'.
Basically they said 'thanks shorty but you've only got enough in that tiny body for yourself'.
As far as the crims are concerned, we all have CJD
A little petulant, there, considering the last couple hundred years of Australian history and the fact that it's a risk factor specific to a certain type of immigrant (i.e. people like me that ate lots of discount beef-based school dinners in the 80s).
Used to give blood regularly but due to suffering a TIA back in February and now having to take Asprin daily I'm not allowed to give blood anymore.
I need to get back into donating. The staff are the best people to talk to. I would fail the online quiz as I have no idea if ive been in contact with people carrying infection. As a Paramedic though, my chances are higher than most. They are still happy for me to donate though
A little petulant, there
Really? It's as meaningful as the "have you had sex in Africa" or "are you, or have you been gay" questions. Totally irrelevant, and given how desperate both here in Oz and back in the UK the medics seem to be for blood, you'd have thought that they would make volunteering to give some a little easier.
It's as meaningful as the "have you had sex in Africa" or "are you, or have you been gay" questions.
Rates of HIV/AIDS and malaria infection are high enough in (many parts of) Africa to warrant precautionary concern about donations from people who have travelled in those countries in the last twelve months. The same decision has been taken about male-with-male sex. There's full information on the website. I'd suggest that the rate of CJD infection in the UK is radically lower than infection with the relevant diseases of concern in the other named populations, so it's not as meaningful as the other factors.
The Australian Red Cross asks neither whether you have had sex in Africa nor whether you have ever been gay. Perhaps you're mistaking small talk with the dishy receptionist with the pre-donation questionnaire? ๐