Actually 9 reasons, and one of the 9 is allowed to go free and just given a gentle recommendation to verify it :P But a fun article for anyone on the fence about whether to donate or not, obviously slanted towards “yes, donate.”
I’m lazy and don’t like needles. I did it when the red cross come to the office but that hasn’t happened since COVID.
My first experience with it was having a huge pain in my arm every time I move it from the vertical position, and this lasted for like 2-3 days, plus the pain I felt in my finger that was tested for blood eligibility every time it touched something, which lasted for a couple of days as well.
Wasn’t a fun experience, not sure if I’ll do it again :-/
“huge” compared to the act. Wasn’t that huge, but muscle aches basically
But in my finger it definitely felt like someone was planting something in my finger every time I put a bit of pressure on it. Annoying to temporarily lose the ability to use a finger because I donated :(
So there definitely aren’t only 10 reasons you might not donate
Not long after my last donation, I broke my damned hand. still hasn’t healed right so I keep putting my next one off, which is a real shame since I wanted to do them quite frequently
I don’t give blood because we have the technology to mass-produce completely antigen-free red blood cells artificially, but we don’t because there are so many donors.
There is a blood shortage in almost every single nation on earth. What are you talking about?
That’s not true. Cultured blood cells can’t be produced at anywhere near the volume or cost of donated blood. Synthetics are still a long way off.
No one is working on it because we have so much volume. But it is very technologically feasible.
Feasible, yes, but we don’t currently have the technology so donors are necessary.
There are people working on synthetic and cultured replacements. It’s not true that “we have so much volume” that no one is working on it. There’s massive shortage of donors.