Mangaluru, Nov 9: A total of 90 units of blood collected from individuals and donation camps are being disposed by the Dakshina Kannada district unit of Indian Red Cross Society (IRCS) as the validity of the untransfused units expired recently.
With a shelf life of merely 35 days, the blood units will be disposed through a proper disposal method in accordance with all applicable regulations. Since the blood units remained unused, they will have to be disposed after expiry, since expired blood cannot be used for blood transfusion thereafter.

Out of the 90 units of blood, 43 units have already been disposed by incineration in a scientific manner. All the units have been segregated and transferred to a separate storage location.
According to the IRCS officials, there were excessive units of blood at the Red Cross blood bank owing to lesser demand for blood than usual. Hence the units remain untransfused which led to their expiry after 35 days.
Normally, the ICRS blood bank also provides blood units to private hospitals during emergencies. Over the past two months, several units of blood were collected through major blood donation drives.
The IRCS blood bank earlier operated from a private hospital, but since its performance was not good enough, a separate block was erected in the premises of Government Lady Goschen Hospital for running the operations of the blood bank.
In view of the disposal of expired and unused blood units, Dakshina Kannada deputy commissioner A B Ibrahim said that measures would be taken to ensure that collected blood units would not be wasted henceforth.
In this regard, social activist Hanumanth Kamath laments the inevitability of disposal of expired blood units, considering it a wastage of blood painstakingly donated by donors. The district administration should see to it that such an event should not occur again in the Dakshina Kannada, he urged.


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