OPINION: Why aren't Australians donating more blood?
Only one in 30 Australians give blood every year, writes Julia Bartrim.
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DID you know Australia is forced to obtain blood products from overseas because Australians don't donate enough to meet demand?
Now there's a lot of people who can't donate blood, whether because of health problems, age, weight, religious beliefs and so on.
Those guys are all off the hook. But for the rest of us, lucky enough to meet all the health criteria, why don't we donate blood?
Only about one in 30 Australians give blood every year according to the Australian Red Cross.
But the ARC also found most of us support the idea of blood donation. We just seem to think it's something that someone else should do.
Not surprisingly, this reluctance to donate is the subject of a fair bit of research.
One of the main reasons we avoid that visit to the blood bank, according to a research paper published in 2016 in the journal Transfusion, is anxiety.
Whether it's the actual process of the donation, the loss of blood, the thought of needles, the sight of blood or the anticipation of blood loss, all these things make us somewhat uneasy.
So how do we overcome this anxiety?
You frequently hear stories from overseas about natural disasters like earthquakes, where half the town lines up to donate blood. Does the sense of urgency and immediacy such events generate overcome our anxiety?
The question is: should we really be relying on blood from overseas? Surely if we think energy security and food security are important, we should be interested in blood security as well?
Julia Bartrim is a journalist at The Observer.
Originally published as OPINION: Why aren't Australians donating more blood?