Survey of medical center employees' willingness and availability to donate blood in support of a civilian warm fresh whole blood program

Joy D. Hughes, Matthew C. Hernandez, Donald H. Jenkins, Mariela Rivera, Mark D. Sawyer, Justin D. Kreuter, James R. Stubbs, Martin D. Zielinski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: In military settings, utilizing warm fresh whole blood (WFWB) was associated with reduced mortality; however, there are multiple challenges for administering WFWB to civilians. The authors aimed to determine barriers to hospital employees emergently donating to civilian WFWB programs. METHODS: We surveyed hospital employee willingness to donate emergently, familiarity with blood donation, and queried baseline demographics. The electronic survey was disseminated to a random sample of employees. Descriptive and univariate analyses were performed. RESULTS: Three thousand surveys were sent; 883 were returned (28 percent). The majority of respondents were female (n = 630, 71 percent). Respondent familiarity with WFWB donation included very/somewhat familiar (n = 381, 43 percent) and somewhat-not/not-at-all familiar (n = 356, 40 percent). Most were definitely or somewhat willing to emergently donate (n = 660, 75 percent). Four hundred and sixty would drive from home to donate (52 percent). The majority worked day-time shifts (n = 754, 85 percent). In regards to donation history, 366 (41 percent) had donated blood more than ten times, but 138 (16 percent) had never donated. Barriers to emergent donation were identified (55 percent), with the most common being childcare responsibilities (n = 242; 27 percent). CONCLUSIONS: Hospital employees are willing to donate WFWB emergently, but program implementation must address donor availability and logistical barriers. Future research should assess feasibility of a civilian WFWB program by determining regulatory challenges, development of a quality system for emergency donations, assessment of optimal workforce structure, potential impact to the general blood inventory, as well as patient and community perspectives regarding untested blood units.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)101-111
Number of pages11
JournalAmerican journal of disaster medicine
Volume14
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2019

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Survey of medical center employees' willingness and availability to donate blood in support of a civilian warm fresh whole blood program'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this