By Amaani Lyle
American Forces Press Service
FALLS CHURCH, Va., June 24, 2014 – Eligible service members,
beneficiaries, contractors, government service workers and retirees may be able
to save lives globally through their ongoing blood donations, the Armed
Services Blood Program director said.
Navy Capt. Roland Fahie said the program includes the Army,
Navy and Air Force but supports the entire Defense Department medical health
system, including the Coast Guard and the reserve components.
“Though we’re at war, we have to make sure the blood supply remains
safe even in conditions which can be austere,” Fahie said. “We support
surgeries around the world, wherever blood is needed, in whatever type or
amount and in the right amount of time.”
The Armed Services Blood Program coordinates with the
services to ensure the delivery of safe blood and helps them implement their
policies on safe collection.
“We all work together as a unit to collect, test, ship and
manage the entire distribution system of blood and blood products throughout
the Armed Services Blood Program,” he said.
But Fahie noted that military people and family members can
be prone to any of several travel-related and medical restrictions in
accordance with Food and Drug Administration guidance to the Defense
Department. The policies, he explained, are based on FDA regulations and other
regulatory organizations such as the American Association of Blood Banks and
the College of American Pathologists.
Fahie said ASBP’s strict adherence to the policies mandate
that all donor centers and transfusion services within the program are licensed
by the FDA to collect, test and ship blood and blood products globally.
As the military moves out of operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the captain said, State Department hospitals remain in the areas
of responsibility, where they continue to treat people and rely on the ASBP not
only for blood and blood products, but also for technical assistance.
Meanwhile, ASBP’s transfusion medicine and business
practices have evolved for the better since Operation Enduring Freedom and
Operation Iraqi Freedom, Fahie said. “We are the expeditionary explorers of
transfusion practices and guidelines in the theater or in trauma situations,”
he added.
The captain recounted that from World War II to Vietnam to
modern-day conflicts, transfusion-related death rates have dropped from 60
percent to 16 percent to 10 percent for very specific reasons.
“We’ve been getting fresher blood to them faster at the
point of injury because of the logistics we have in theater to move blood forward,”
Fahie said. “We can now transfuse blood en route, we can transfuse blood at any
theater hospital or even with a special forces unit and OEF/OIF really helped
us shape the way that we practice transfusion medicine.”
Whether for war or humanitarian assistance, ASBP may need to
travel to an area at risk for infectious diseases or where there could be a
travel restriction already in place, the captain said.
Fahie also pointed out the issue of unpredictability of FDA
testing for certain diseases such as Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome, while
ongoing caution remains for long-threatening diseases like malaria. “The
challenge is to educate recruits because a lot of the blood [warfighters]
receive on the battlefield when injured is coming through the Armed Services
Blood Program,” he said.
Fahie said officials have considered realigning the
program’s marketing efforts to be closer to training bases to reach populations
who haven’t yet been to regions that might preclude donations.
Fahie also noted that while the ASBP works closely with the
American Red Cross, the American Blood Centers and other civilian blood
collection agencies to assist with requirements they cannot fill, there are
important distinctions.
“We’re the only distribution system that’s going to get you
blood on the battlefield -- and it’s going to come through the Armed Services
Blood Program,” Fahie said. “[Donations] impact our mission of being able to
support the warfighter anywhere.”
The captain explained that ASBP resources are pre-positioned
globally to ensure rapid response from casualty receiving and hospital ships,
aircraft, Marine elements and myriad other locales. Though it’s widely known
that the program supports people while at war, Fahie related that hospitals
still must operate while not at war to provide global assistance.
“We’re in Vietnam, we’re in Africa, Laos, Cambodia,
Thailand. … We’re all over the world, assisting with writing the national
policy and helping them to have a safe blood supply for their military and
civilian community,” he said.
While most healthy adults are eligible to give blood, some
people may be deferred from donating temporarily, indefinitely, or permanently,
Fahie said.
Though deferral criteria have been established for the
protection of those donating and for those receiving transfusions in accordance
with FDA regulatory requirements, a temporary deferral should not discourage
donors from coming back, the captain said.
Generally, blood donors must:
-- Weigh at least 110 pounds;
-- Be at least 17 years of age, though the age may vary by
state;
-- Have been feeling well for at least three days;
-- Be well hydrated; and
-- Have eaten something prior to donating.
According to the ASBP website, blood donor travel-related
deferral criteria do not apply to organ and bone marrow or hematopoietic stem
cell donation, and those ineligible to donate blood due to travel to
disease-prevalent areas may still be eligible to donate organs and bone marrow.
Visit the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network for
information on becoming an organ donor and the C.W. Bill Young Department of
Defense Marrow Donor Program to learn how to join the National Bone Marrow
Donor Registry for additional ways to save a life.
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