Blood donation is a procedure that can help save lives. People volunteer to donate blood. There are many types of blood donation. Each type helps meet different medical needs.

Whole blood donation

Whole blood donation is the most common type of blood donation. During this donation, you donate about a pint (about half a liter) of whole blood. The blood may stay as whole blood. Or a special machine can separate the blood into its parts. These parts include red blood cells, plasma and platelets.

Apheresis

Apheresis is a type of blood donation where only a certain part of the blood is donated. During apheresis, you are connected to a machine that collects the blood and separates the part needed. After the machine does its work, it returns the other parts of blood back to you. Apheresis is a procedure to collect red cells, plasma or platelets.

In a blood donation, you agree to have blood drawn and collected so that it can be given to someone who needs a blood transfusion.

Millions of people need blood transfusions each year. Some may need blood during surgery. Others depend on it after an accident or because they have a condition that needs certain parts of blood. Blood donation makes this possible. There is no substitute for human blood. All transfusions use blood from donors.

Blood donation is safe. Healthcare professionals use new, sterile one-time use equipment for each person who gives blood. By doing this, there’s no risk of getting an infection by giving blood.

Most healthy adults can safely donate a pint (about half a liter) of blood. Within a few days of giving blood, the body replaces the lost fluids. The body replaces the red blood cells in a few weeks.

Eligibility requirements for blood donation

To be eligible to donate whole blood, plasma or platelets, you must be:

Eligibility requirements vary slightly among different types of blood donation.

Food and medicines

Before your blood donation:

Before the procedure

Before your blood donation, a healthcare professional asks you to fill out a form with information about your medical history. The form may ask questions about behaviors known to carry higher risks of infections that can be passed through blood., called bloodborne infections.

Not everyone is eligible to donate blood because of the risk of passing bloodborne infections to others. The following groups are not eligible to donate blood:

After you complete the form, you have a short physical exam. The exam includes checking blood pressure, pulse, temperature and sometimes weight. A small sample of blood is taken with a finger prick. A healthcare professional then checks the blood sample for the level of the oxygen-carrying part of the blood, called hemoglobin. If the hemoglobin is high enough and you’ve met all the other screening requirements, you can donate blood.

COVID-19 concerns

The virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hasn’t been shown to spread through blood transfusions. But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) suggests waiting to donate blood for at least 10 days after a positive diagnostic test for COVID-19 without symptoms. If you have COVID-19 symptoms, avoid giving blood until 10 days after the symptoms have gone away.

During the procedure

During a blood donation, you lie or sit in a reclining chair and extend the arm you want to use for the blood draw on an armrest. A healthcare professional briefly puts a blood pressure cuff or device to stop blood flow, called a tourniquet, around the upper arm. This device helps fill the veins with more blood. This makes the veins easier to see so that the health professional can put the needle in the vein. The blood bag will fill more quickly too.

The healthcare professional cleans the skin and then puts a new, sterile needle in a vein in the arm. This needle is attached to a thin, plastic tube and a blood bag. Once the needle is in place, you tighten your fist many times to help the blood flow from the vein. After the sample pouch fills, more blood flows into the bag to about a pint (about half a liter) level. The needle is usually in place for about 10 minutes when you donate whole blood. When your blood donation is finished, the healthcare professional removes the needle, places a small gauze pad on the needle site and wraps a dressing around your arm.

Apheresis is another common but slightly different way of donating blood. During apheresis, you are connected to a machine that collects and separates different parts of the blood, such as red cells, plasma and platelets. This process allows more of a single part to be collected, and the other parts are given back to the donor. Apheresis donation takes longer than standard blood donation. Sometimes apheresis can take up to two hours. You can read, listen to music, relax or watch videos during an apheresis donation.

After the procedure

After donating blood, you sit in an observation area. You can rest, eat a light snack and drink fluids. After 15 minutes, you can leave. After your blood donation:

Contact the blood donation center or your healthcare professional if you:

Testing

Your donated blood is tested to determine the blood type and Rh factor. It also is tested for antibodies. The blood type is classified as type A, B, AB or O. The Rh factor refers to the presence or absence of a substance that can cause an immune response in the blood, called an antigen. Your blood is Rh positive if you have an antigen called the D antigen. Healthcare professionals can only give donated blood to people with a blood type that is compatible with the donor’s blood type and Rh factor. The blood donation organization also tests the blood for antibodies that might cause illness in a person who receives the blood.

People at the blood donation organization send the blood to a special laboratory that tests the blood for infectious conditions. If the tests for infectious conditions are negative, they send the blood out for use. If any tests are positive, the donation center may test the blood again. If the blood test is still positive, someone at the center lets you know. The donation center does not use a blood donation if there is a risk to the person who might receive the blood.

© 1998-2024 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). All rights reserved.

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