Irish Blood Transfusion Service
The Irish Blood Transfusion Service (IBTS), or Seirbhís Fuilaistriúcháin na hÉireann in Irish, was established in Ireland as the Blood Transfusion Service Board (BTSB) by the Blood Transfusion Service Board (Establishment) Order, 1965.[1] It took its current name in April 2000 by Statutory Instrument issued by the Minister for Health and Children to whom it is responsible. The Service provides blood and blood products for humans.
History
The service is the successor to the National Blood Transfusion Association which was established in 1948 and was, itself, born from the work carried out by the St. John Ambulance Brigade of Ireland in setting up an 'on call' blood donor panel[2] to serve hospitals in the Dublin area. In 1975 the Cork Blood Transfusion Service was amalgamated with the board, and in 1991 the Limerick Blood Transfusion Service was amalgamated with the board.
The symbol of the service is a stylised pelican, and for most of its existence the headquarters of the service was located at Pelican House (first in Lower Leeson Street and then Mespil Road) in Dublin. In 2000 the service moved to the National Blood Centre on the grounds of St. James's Hospital near Dublin Heuston railway station, on which it remains. The service maintains regional facilities at Ardee, Carlow, Cork, Limerick and Tuam.
The Compensation Tribunal
Between 1977 and 1994 a number of people unknowingly received Hepatitis C-infected blood, and clear evidence of this did not become available until the mid-1990s. Most of those infected by the blood were women. The Hepatitis C and HIV Compensation Tribunal was established by the Hepatitis C Compensation Tribunal Act, 1997, and amended by the Hepatitis C Compensation Tribunal (Amendment) Act, 2002, to compensate people who contracted Hepatitis C or HIV as a result of receiving blood or blood products from the Service.
About blood
The frequency of blood groups in Ireland is as follows:[3]
O Positive | 47% | O Negative | 8% | A Positive | 28% | A Negative | 5% |
B Positive | 9% | B Negative | 2% | AB Positive | 2% | AB Negative | 1% |
It is important that the IBTS collects enough O Rh D positive blood as almost half the population are that blood type. Donors with O Rh D negative are known as universal donors. Their blood can be transfused to patients of any other blood group in an emergency or if the patient's own blood group is unavailable. Because any patient can receive O Rh D negative blood, the IBTS need to have extra O Rh D negative blood available at all times.
Eligibility to donate
The service depends entirely on voluntary donations from the public. New donors must be aged between 18 and 64, weigh over 50 kilograms (7 stone 12 lbs), and be in good health. At every donation haemoglobin levels are checked and donors complete a detailed health and lifestyle questionnaire. Donors can give blood every 90 days.
The IBTS imposes a number of restrictions on those who can give blood. These comply with those of the European Union, World Health Organisation, and the Irish Medicines Board, and are similar to other countries. These restrictions ensure that blood products are safe for recipients. A four-month restriction is placed on donors who have had piercings or tattoos or had acupuncture, and a similar restriction on anyone who has visited a tropical area (three months). There is a year-long deferral for those who have visited a malarial area. Donors who have travelled to the United States or Canada have to wait for four weeks before donating due to spread of the West Nile Virus there. Certain medications or conditions can also exclude people from donation.
Additionally, there are groups of people who are barred from donating blood based on their membership of high-risk groups. This includes people who have lived for a year or more in the United Kingdom (UK) between the years 1980–1996 and those who received medical procedures in the UK since 1 January 1980, due to the risk of variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (vCJD) in that country. vCJD has a long incubation period and no laboratory test can detect it. People who have ever been injected with any kind of non-prescription drug, and anyone who have ever been paid for sex with money or drugs are also permanently barred from donating blood.
Ban on men who have sex with men
Any man who has ever had sexual contact with another man (MSM) is strictly banned from donating blood. This is in line with a number of other national blood transfusion services due to the statistically high prevalence of HIV and hepatitis of MSM in "population studies".
The IBTS "accepts that they are being discriminatory; we discriminate against several groups in the community insofar as we refuse to allow them to donate blood on the basis of perceived increased risk of spreading infections through blood transfusion".[4] Several campaigns have been launched in an effort to reverse the ban.[5][6] Gay Doctors Ireland denounced the ban as "unscientific" and outdated.[7]
On 27 July 2015, Tomás Heneghan, a 23-year-old student and journalist from Galway began a legal challenge in the High Court against the permanent deferral imposed on MSM donors.[8][9] He is arguing that the questionnaire and interview process used by the IBTS does not adequately assess the risk of disease transmission posed by his donation. He claims this is in breach of EU law. He says that both failed to consider the length of time between a donor's last sexual experience and the end of a “window period” in which infections are sometimes not detected. Heneghan's previous sexual activity posed no risk of infection, according to HSE-approved advice and he says the service had no evidence upon which it could legitimately impose a life-long ban on him donating blood. The case is listed to return to the court on 17 November 2015. Previously in August 2013 Heneghan had alleged the Irish Blood Transfusion Service had discriminated against him despite his assertion that he had never had sex with another man.[10]
Donor Awards
Donors are recognised for their commitment by being awarded as follows: A silver award is given for 10 donations; a gold award for 20 donations; a gold drop-shaped lapel pin (representing blood) for 50 donations, and presentation at an awards dinner ceremony; and a porcelain pelican for 100 donations, and presentation at an awards dinner ceremony.
Platelets and bone marrow
The Irish Blood Transfusion Service is also responsible for the collection of blood platelets and for managing the Unrelated Bone Marrow registry in Ireland. Donors can give platelets at the National Blood Centre in St James Hospital in Dublin or at St. Finbarr's Hospital in Cork. Donors can join the unrelated bone marrow registry through their local blood clinic by offering an extra blood sample and satisfying suitability criteria.
See also
- National Blood Service, in the United Kingdom.
References
- ↑ "S.I. No. 78/1965 – The Blood Transfusion Service Board (Establishment) Order, 1965". Irishstatutebook.ie. Retrieved 11 July 2010.
- ↑ http://www.ibts.ie/generic.cfm?mID=7&sID=105 Archived 3 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Irish Blood Transfusion Service – Irish Blood Group Type Frequency Distribution". Irish Blood Transfusion Service. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20080503234130/http://www.ibts.ie/generic.cfm?mID=2&sID=80
- ↑ "'End gay blood ban', plead students". Limerickpost.ie. 18 March 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2010.
- ↑ "Johnny : Blood Ban : Campaigns". Johnny.ie. 28 November 2009. Retrieved 11 July 2010.
- ↑ "Gay Doctors Ireland criticise blood transfusion ban". Imn.ie. 4 May 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2010.
- ↑ http://www.thejournal.ie/gay-blood-ban-tomas-heneghan-2240158-Jul2015/
- ↑ http://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/courts/high-court/gay-man-brings-legal-challenge-over-blood-donation-ban-1.2298825
- ↑ http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/gay-man-alleges-prejudice-by-blood-bank-1.1505419