mtmt
The Hungarian Scientific Bibliography
XML
JSON
Public search
Magyarul
Citations
/
Citings
National level adjustments to the challenges of the SARS-CoV2 pandemic on blood banking operations
Matusovits, A.
;
Nagy, S.
;
Baróti-Tóth, K.
;
Nacsa, J.
;
Lázár, M.
;
Marton, I. [Marton, Imelda (haematológia), author] Second Department of Internal Medicine and Card... (SZTE / ASZMS / DIMedicine); Department of Transfusiology (SZTE / ASZMS)
;
Andrikovics, H. [Andrikovics, Hajnalka (orvostudomány), author] Transzfúziológiai Tanszék (SU / FM / C)
;
Vokó, Z. [Vokó, Zoltán (A nem-fertőző bet...), author] Center for Health Technology Assessment (SU / KSZE)
;
Tordai, A. ✉ [Tordai, Attila (Orvostudomány), author] Transzfúziológiai Tanszék (SU / FM / C)
English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published:
TRANSFUSION 0041-1132 1537-2995
61
(5)
pp. 1404-1411
2021
SJR Scopus - Hematology: Q2
Identifiers
MTMT: 31937915
DOI:
10.1111/trf.16346
WoS:
000630235300001
Scopus:
85102623216
PubMed:
33644858
SZTE Publicatio:
23286
Fundings:
(K135757) Funder: NRDIO
(2020-1.1.6-JÖVŐ-2021-00010)
Subjects:
MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES
Cardiac and Cardiovascular systems
Background: SARS-CoV2 causing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is responsible for an unprecedented worldwide pandemic severely affecting all activities of societies including blood banking. We aimed to systematically collect key indicators in a nationally centralized blood banking system and to perform comparisons between 2020 and 2019. Methods: Count data for January–December 2020 and 2019 were extracted from the integrated informatics system of Hungarian National Blood Transfusion Service and analyzed by simple graphics, tabulations, and statistics. Results: Whole blood donation activity showed a highly significant decline due to a sharp decrease in field donations by an average fall of 24% (range:17%–28%) during March–May 2020 compared to identical period of 2019. A second, more moderate decline accompanied the second wave in late fall. The simultaneous increase in institutional donations did not counterbalance this decline. Donor exclusion rates fell significantly by an average of 1,1% (range:0.9%–1.6%) in the three spring lockdown-affected months. First-time and repeat donors showed decreased turn-out in larger proportions compared to highly repeat donors. Interestingly, among repeat and highly repeat donors, females showed less-pronounced declines compared to males while this was not observed among first-time donors. In June–September, a remarkable swing-back was observed among highly repeat female donors. Product utilization fell most notably for RBC (mean:26.2%) but also for PLT (mean:19.8%) and FFP (mean:24.3%) and showed a full recovery in June–September followed by a second decline. Conclusion: Trends and reaction patterns of blood banking reported by our study may be useful in future planning and adjustments of blood banking activities. © 2021 The Authors. Transfusion published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of AABB.
Cited in (5)
Citing (1)
Citation styles:
IEEE
ACM
APA
Chicago
Harvard
CSL
Copy
Print
2025-04-02 02:24
×
Export list as bibliography
Citation styles:
IEEE
ACM
APA
Chicago
Harvard
Print
Copy