I would contact your local department of public health or your states governing 
agency for hazardous/biological waste - for example in Colorado our hazardous 
waste is controlled by the Colorado Department of Health.  You should be able 
to register a complaint through them.

On a personal note and no Bob I'm not calling you out.  Not all plasma donors 
are sleazy I personally have donated over 50 units of platelets where I used to 
work and was not paid for any of it.  I did get to watch TV or a movie for a 
couple hours since I donated during work hours (I would actually do paperwork 
when I was on the machine).  I would even donate for specific patients when 
necessary, apparently some patients did well with my platelets.  It was really 
fascinating, a small suburban 400 bed hospital with a very active blood bank, I 
learned a lot, it was a great experience overall.

Liz

Elizabeth A. Chlipala, BS, HTL(ASCP)QIHC
Premier Laboratory, LLC
PO Box 18592
Boulder, CO 80308
(303) 682-3949 office
(303) 682-9060 fax
(303) 881-0763 cell
[email protected]
www.premierlab.com

Ship to Address:

Premier Laboratory, LLC
1567 Skyway Drive, Unit E
Longmont, CO 80504

-----Original Message-----
From: Frazier, John via Histonet [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, July 24, 2017 11:58 AM
To: Bob Richmond
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Histonet] Blood donations for money

Under FDA guidelines plasmapheresis donor are held to a higher standard than 
red cell downers when it comes to qualifications.
Plasmapheresis donors are required take a physical once a year by a registered 
nurse.
Each plasma donor center must a medical director that can only be filled by a 
licensed physician. They are required to be on site minimum 20 hours a month to 
review laboratory results donor records, physical reviews, and consult any 
donors that were rejected due to positive lab test results.
There are many more FDA, foreign government German Health Ministry, and 
internal company standards that each donor center must abide by. If not they 
can receive 483's which is a citation, warning letters or consent decree.
Each donor is required to donate a minimum of two times with negative test 
results before the units can be put into production. I'll plasma is tested for 
viral markers, total protein, AST(liver test), West Nile, parvovirus, sexually 
transmitted diseases and many other lab test. This lab tests are designed to 
not only monitor the integrity of the plasma pool but also the donor's health.
Prior to the plasma being put into production it goes through a series of 
detergents, cooling and heating, Ultraviolet light that will kill any viral, 
bacterial and or fungal material.
To my knowledge there has not been any diseases acquired by recipients of the 
pharmaceutical derivatives from plasma donors since the 1990's.

These donors may be paid but that is the only way to meet the huge supply of 
plasma needed to make all the different plasma based products. IVIG, RhoGam, 
CVM immunoglobulin, Albumin, *Alpha-1 Antitrypsin*

*Here is a link to the insight of plasma donations and the governing bodies*

http://www.donatingplasma.org/


from my iPhone



Sent from my iPhone
On Jul 23, 2017, at 12:51 PM, Bob Richmond <[email protected]> wrote:

Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, PhD asks about blood donation for money. I suppose he's 
in the US. I don't think there's any paid donation of whole blood in the US any 
more. This is probably a plasmapheresis center, where people donate twice a 
week. The red blood cells are returned to the donor. Two cycles of this are 
usually done at a session.

Many, though not all, plasma donors are pretty sleazy people. I'd ask the 
plasma center first, then complain to local authorities about it. Most of these 
plasma centers are franchise operations, and you could complain to their 
managers also.

Most plasma products (derivatives) can be sterilized so they don't transmit 
viruses. Or so we hope.

Bob Richmond
Samurai Pathologist
Maryville TN
******************************************

Close to where I leave, there is an establishment for blood "donations".

Apparently, the establishment pays per donation. I hypothesize that the

money explains why the place is generally "hopping" (today, ca. 8:30AM,

there were ca, 25-30 cars parked in front of the establishment; Sunday

mornings, same story). Regularly, I see trash out of the store (incl. blood

splatter marks on the sidewalk, gauze, etc.).


Can someone tell me:

1. Where can one find information of the internal operations of

establishments like this?


2. Where can one report concerns about establishments like this?


3. More broadly, how can anyone *scientifically* tell whether the blood

"donated" at those (or any other) establishments is "safe" for use by other

humans?


Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, PhD

blaypublishers.com
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

______________________________________________________________________
This email has been scanned by the Symantec Email Security.cloud service.
For more information please visit http://www.symanteccloud.com
______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

Reply via email to