Tuesday, August 20, 2019
The Safety Of Blood :: essays research papers fc
 The Safety of Blood      A five-year old girl is riding down the street, on her way to her best  friend's house. She doesn't have a care in the world and is quietly humming to  herself. Suddenly a car whips around the corner and swerves to avoid the child,  but he looses control and squarely hits the girl, causing the her to fall and  get trapped between the car and her battered bicycle. A main artery in her leg  has been severed and blood fills the gutter of the street. As she gets rushed  to the hospital in the ambulance, a pint of blood is given to her to attempt to  replace some of the life giving fluid that is pouring out of her leg. In the  end she received four pints of blood and made a full recovery.  Although everything turned out all right for the girl, things could have  been much different. What if that blood hadn't been there because the nation's  blood supply was low? What if the blood that she received had been infected  with a deadly disease such as Syphilis or HIV? These are pressing concerns for  today's society. Even though one in every five people will need a blood  transfusion and the risk of contracting a disease such as AIDS is practically  negligible, people are still concerned that the blood that they receive may have  harmful or deadly diseases and that today's blood supply is not "safe."  However, "safe" means different things for different people. For some,  safe is an absolute security from any danger. This is an extreme viewpoint,  though, because most people realize that one can never be completely safe.  Another, and more popularly held connotation of "safe," is the probability of  not getting hurt. This is a much more reasonable and plausible definition and  therefor will be used throughout this paper. However, even though the  overwhelming probability is that nothing will go wrong, people still fear that  the nation's blood supply is unsafe. They are incorrect in this belief, though,  because much is done to assure that the nation's blood supply is, in fact, safe.  One requirement to having a safe blood supply is to have an extensive  reserve, because this allows for the option of discarding any blood that is  potentially unsafe. The assurance of an ample blood supply begins with the  donation process. Most of the people in this country have the capability to  donate blood. However, only 4 percent of the eligible population actually  donates.1 There are few restrictions and the reason why there are blood  shortages is because people don't want to donate as opposed to can't donate.  					    
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