The nationās roiling tensions over vaccination against covid-19 have spilled into an unexpected arena: lifesaving blood transfusions.
With of the eligible U.S. population fully vaccinated, most of the nationās blood supply is now coming from donors who have been inoculated, experts said. Thatās led some patients who are skeptical of the shots to demand transfusions only from the unvaccinated, an option blood centers insist is neither medically sound nor operationally feasible.
āWe are definitely aware of patients who have refused blood products from vaccinated donors,ā said Dr. Julie Katz Karp, who directs the blood bank and transfusion medicine program at Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals in Philadelphia.
Emily Osment, an American Red Cross spokesperson, said her organization has fielded questions from clients worried that vaccinated blood would be ātainted,ā capable of transmitting components from the covid vaccines. Red Cross officials said theyāve had to reassure clients that a covid vaccine, which is injected into muscle or the layer of skin below, doesnāt circulate in the blood.
āWhile the antibodies that are produced by the stimulated immune system in response to vaccination are found throughout the bloodstream, the actual vaccine components are not,ā Jessa Merrill, the Red Cross director of biomedical communications, said in an email.
So far, such demands have been rare, industry officials said. Dr. Louis Katz, chief medical officer for ImpactLife, an Iowa-based blood center, said heās heard from āa small handfulā of patients asking for blood from unvaccinated donors. And the resounding answer from centers and hospitals, he added, has been āno.ā
āI know of no one who has acceded to such a request, which would be an operational can of worms for a medically unjustifiable request,ā Katz wrote in an email.
In practical terms, blood centers have only limited access to donated blood that has not in some way been affected by covid. Based on samples, Katz estimated that as much as 60% to 70% of the blood currently being donated is coming from vaccinated donors. Overall, more than 90% of current donors have either been infected with covid or vaccinated against it, said Dr. Michael Busch, director of the Vitalant Research Institute, who is monitoring antibody levels in samples from the U.S. blood supply.
āLess than 10% of the blood we collect does not have antibodies,ā Busch noted.
In addition, outside of research studies, blood centers in the U.S. donāt retain data noting whether donors have been infected with or vaccinated against covid, and thereās no federal requirement that collected blood products be identified in that manner.
āThe Food and Drug Administration has determined thereās no safety risk, so thereās no reason to label the units,ā said Dr. Claudia Cohn, chief medical officer for AABB, a nonprofit focused on transfusion medicine and cellular therapies.
Indeed, the FDA routine screening of blood donors for covid. Respiratory viruses, in general, arenāt known to spread by blood transfusion and, worldwide, there have been no reported cases of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease, being transmitted via blood. identified the risk as ānegligible.ā
All donors are supposed to be healthy when they give blood and about potential risks. Collected units of blood are tested for transmissible infectious diseases before theyāre distributed to hospitals.
But that hasnāt quelled concerns for some people skeptical of covid vaccines.
In Bedford, Texas, the father of a boy scheduled for surgery recently asked that his son get blood exclusively from unvaccinated donors, said Dr. Geeta Paranjape, medical director at Carter BloodCare. Separately, a young mother fretted about transfusions from vaccinated donors to her newborn.
Many patients expressing concerns have been influenced by rampant misinformation about vaccines and the blood supply, said Paranjape. āA lot of people think thereās some kind of microchip or theyāre going to be cloned,ā she said.
Other patients have balked at getting blood from people previously infected with covid, even though greenlights donations two weeks after a positive test or the last symptom fades.
Last month, a woman facing a cesarean section for a high-risk pregnancy said she didnāt want blood from a donor who had had covid, recalled Cohn with AABB. āI said, āListen, the alternative is you donāt get the blood and thatās what will affect you,āā Cohn said.
Some industry experts were hesitant to discuss the vaccine-free blood requests, for fear it would fuel more such demands. But Cohn and others said correcting widely spread misinformation outweighed the risk.
Patients are free to refuse transfusions for any reason, industry officials said. But in dire situations ā trauma, emergency surgery ā saving lives often requires using the available blood. For patients with chronic conditions requiring transfusion, alternative treatments such as medication or certain equipment may not be as efficient or effective.
People who require transfusions also may in advance or request donations from designated friends and family members. But thereās no evidence that the blood is safer when patients select donors than that provided by the volunteer blood system, according to the Red Cross.
Earlier in the pandemic, many blood donations were tested to see whether they contained antibodies to the covid virus. The hope was that blood from previously infected people who had recovered from covid could be used to treat those who were very sick with the disease. Tens of thousands of patients were treated with so-called convalescent plasma under a and through
But the much-hyped use of convalescent plasma largely fell flat after studies showed no clear-cut benefits for the broad swath of covid patients. (Research continues into the potential benefits of treating narrowly targeted patient groups with high-potency plasma.) Most hospitals stopped testing blood and labeling units with high levels of antibodies this spring, said Busch. āItās really no longer a germane issue because weāre not testing anymore,ā he said. āThereās no way we can inform recipients.ā
Busch stressed that the studies also have shown no harm associated with infusing antibody-containing blood plasma into covid patients.
Past health crises have raised similar concerns about sources of donor blood. In the mid-1980s, recipients scared by the AIDS epidemic didnāt want blood donated from cities such as San Francisco with large gay populations, Busch recalled. Even now, some recipients demand not to receive blood from people of certain races or ethnicities.
Such requests, like those for vaccine-free blood, have no medical or scientific basis and are soundly refused, blood center officials said.
The most pressing issue for blood centers remains the ongoing shortage of willing donors. As of the second week of August, the national blood supply was ā worth or less at a third of sites affiliated with Americaās Blood Centers. That can limit the blood available for trauma victims, surgery patients and others who rely on transfusions to survive.
āIf for some reason we didnāt want vaccinated people to donate blood, weād be in a real problem, wouldnāt we?ā Karp said. āPlease believe us when we tell you itās fine.ā
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