R a l a t

ref: Apakah darah dari pemakan daging babi dan yang minum alkohol tidak haram 
sebagai donator darah kepada kaum beriman? 


http://www.thejakartapost.com/bali-daily/2013-02-23/foreigners-are-invited-donate-rare-blood-pmi-bali.html
Foreigners are invited to donate rare blood at PMI Bali
by Luh De Suriyani on 2013-02-23 
The blood donor unit at the Bali chapter of the Indonesian Red Cross (PMI) is 
inviting foreigners, who have negative blood types, to donate their blood in 
order to maintain the blood bank’s supply of rare rhesus blood. 

The director of PMI Bali’s blood donor unit, AAG Sudewa, said that Bali was the 
only province in Indonesia that had a supply of rare blood at its headquarters 
in the Sanglah General Hospital in Denpasar. 

“Other provinces, like Jakarta and Surabaya, usually contact PMI Bali when they 
need rare types of blood, particularly for foreign patients,” said Sudewa in 
Denpasar on Friday. Only 0.01 percent of Indonesia’s total population has 
negative rhesus blood. Indonesian patients with negative rhesus find it 
difficult to find donor matches. Most negative rhesus blood types are found 
among foreigners.

For the database of rare blood donors, PMI Bali has established a network with 
an association of rare blood-type donors, whose members are mostly foreign 
nationals working in Bali. Sudewa intends to hold a meeting with the 
association to improve the blood donation mechanism. 

“But we also need to have some ready stock, so that we don’t have to call 
future donors, and pick the first person, especially when an emergency case 
occurs,” said Sudewa, adding that he would also seek assistance from the 
immigration office and hotels to announce PMI Bali’s appeal for more foreigners 
with negative rhesus to donate blood. 

“The donors who intend to donate their negative rhesus blood can call their 
hotel reception personnel, who will contact PMI Bali. Our team of medical 
personnel equipped with blood donor equipment are ready to go to the donors’ 
locations to perform the procedure,” said Sudewa. 

Sudewa emphasized that a ready supply of blood was vital, not only for locals 
but also for foreign patients in Bali. The island has a ready supply of blood 
to last five days, while other provinces usually only have a three-day supply. 

In Bali, around 100 bags of blood are used every day. The blood is obtained 
from volunteer donors and replacement donors who are usually related to the 
patients in need. 

The blood supply at the PMI Bali headquarters at Sanglah hospital is now 
sufficient for February, thanks to the volunteer blood drive held recently on 
Valentine’s Day. As of Feb. 22, PMI Bali recorded a supply of almost 500 bags 
of donor blood, comprising 265 bags of blood-type O, 166 bags of type B, and 
125 bags of type A. 

However, Sudewa acknowledged that many people still sought advice from 
substitute donors via social media sites because many of them were panicking 
and had not checked the blood supply at PMI Bali. 

“They were in a panic and were not aware that we had ready supplies,” he said. 

Cok Agung Kurniawan, one of the medical officers who monitors blood donors, 
said social media sites served as an effective way to seek substitute donors. 

He himself manages the Facebook account for PMI Bali’s blood donor unit. “The 
status of PMI Bali’s blood-stock levels can be checked via our Facebook 
account,” said Cok, adding that Facebook was also an effective way to attract 
new donors.


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