A market for blood? Many Americans, used to being rewarded for a
donation with a warm feeling of talking to WPTV of West Palm Beach, Florida.
public service rather than cold cash,
might see the idea as offensive. “I would guess 99 percent of people
don't know that blood is sold,” says Ben Bowman, CEO of General Blood, a
national blood brokerage firm,
Yes, there is a blood market, a big one with a turnover of $3 billion per year by some accounts, and it is entering a period of turmoil.
Demand
Just
a few years ago, people thought an aging population, in need of more
hip replacements and heart bypasses, would mean an endlessly rising
demand for blood. In recent years, though, doctors have come to realize
that transfusions, life-saving though they can be, have a downside. The
cost of unnecessary transfusions is one consideration, but the risk of
transmitting disease is the real negative.
As anesthesiologist, Josh Martini remarked to Minnesota Public Radio,
"I was told in medical school, 'don't bother giving one unit, you
should just give two if you're going to give any.'" Now, he says, the
mantra is changing to "why give two, when one will do?">>>Read More
Follow this link to view or download a brief slideshow with supply-and-demand graphics that can be used as an in-class quiz or independent reading for students.
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