BB guy 2 donation Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Question | Answer |
| Minimum age for volunteer blood donor | 17 or 16 in some states (with parental consent) |
| donation interval for whole blood donation | 56 days (8 weeks) |
| donation interval for double red cell collection | > 16 weeks for double red cell collections |
| donation interval for infrequent plasmapheresis | > 4 weeks for infrequent plasmapheresis |
| donation interval for double/triple platelet apheresis | > 7 days for double/triple platelet apheresis |
| This is the HIV information presented to donor | 1) Signs/symptoms and risk factors for HIV 2) Statement: Do not to donate if have any risk factors or if just wanting HIV test |
| Medication list; prevents donations from those taking these 3 categories ofMedications | 1) Medications with teratogenic potential 2) Medications with infectious risk 3) Medications that damage platelets |
| Deferral period for IV drug abuse | 3 months |
| Deferral period for History of Babesiosis | see recent guidance from FDA; defer if h/o babesia and no test; defer 2 years for positive test; if testing- no question required for babesia; if had babesia- 2 years plus negative test |
| Deferral period for Insulin from bovine sources | No deferral |
| Deferral period for Dura mater graft | Permanent/indefinite |
| Deferral period for taking etretinate (Tegison) | Permanent/indefinite |
| Deferral period after recovered from malaria | 3 year deferral |
| Deferral period for taking acitretin (Soriatane) | 3 year deferral |
| Deferral period for Immigrants from malaria-endemic countries (after 5 consecutive years of living there) | 3 year deferral |
| Deferral period for needle sticks or other contact with blood | 3 months |
| Deferral period for incarcerated > 72 consecutive hours | One year deferral Look up |
| Deferral period for paying money/drugs for sex | 3 months under 4/20 guidance |
| Deferral period for blood transfusion (allogeneic) | 3 months |
| Deferral period for Allogeneic transplant of organ/skin/bone - | One year deferral Look up |
| Deferral period for Living with person with active hepatitis (exception: Asymptomatic Hepatitis C) | One year deferral |
| Deferral period for ) -Receiving Hepatitis B Immune Globulin (HBIG) - | One year deferral Look up |
| Deferral period for Tattoos/piercings (unless by regulated entity) - | 3 months |
| Deferral period for Travel to malaria-endemic areas for residents of non-endemic countries (>24 hrs, < 5 years) | 3 months |
| Deferral period for donors diagnosed with syphilis or gonorrhea | 3 months after treatment completed |
| Deferral period for -Non-prophylactic rabies vaccination | One year deferral |
| Deferral period for “Travel” to Iraq | One year deferral |
| Deferral period for Malignancy | Medical director discretion (not mandated); Studies do not show that malignancy can be transmitted via transfusion |
| Deferral period for Heart and lung disease | No specific mandated deferrals; Medical directors determine acceptability (time since diagnosis, presence of limitations on activities, proper medical follow-up) |
| Deferral period for pregnancy | Defer until 6 wks postpartum. |
| Deferral period for Non-routine dental work | Defer for 72 hours. |
| Deferral period for killed, toxoid, or recombinant/synthetic vaccines | none |
| Deferral period for varicella vaccine | these vaccines are Four Week deferrals: Rubella Varicella |
| Deferral period for Measles vaccine | these vaccines are Two Week deferrals: Measles Mumps Oral polio Yellow fever Oral typhoid |
| Deferral period for Unlicensed vaccines | these vaccines are 12 Month deferrals: Unlicensed vaccines |
| Deferral period for smallpox vaccine | Deferrals based on presence/ absence of vaccine scab and post-vaccination symptoms; No symptoms: defer until scab falls off or 21 days, whichever is longer; With symptoms: defer until 14 days after symptoms resolve |
| List drugs with a 30 day deferral | Isotretinoin (Accutane, Absorica, Amnesteem, Claravis, Sotret): Finasteride (Proscar, Propecia) |
| Deferral period for Avodart (dutasteride) | 6 months for Dutasteride (Avodart, Jalyn): |
| Deferral period for aspirin | Aspirin/aspirin like meds for platelets (48 hours) |
| Most common donor reaction | Vasovagal reactions; (2.5% of healthy donors) 1) Most common in young, first-time female donors 2) Can be seen in any donor, though 3) Can happen before, during, or after donation |
| Most common donor reaction during apheresis procedure | hypocalcemia: Citrate anticoagulant binds free calcium. symptoms: Perioral tingling, Tetany and arrhythmias uncommon. Treatment: Slow rate of infusion, give oral calcium (tums) |
| Infectious disease testing requirements for autologous blood units | Infectious disease screening not required unless units are to be shipped to another facility; If not tested, label units “NOT TESTED”; Only first donation in a 30-day period MUST be tested; after that may be labeled “DONOR TESTED WITHIN THE LAST 30 DAYS” |
| Minimum hemoglobin/hematocrit for autologous blood donation | 11g/dl / 33% |
| maximum number of times a donor can donate platelets in a year | 24 |
| time between platelet donations | at least 48 hours; no more than twice in a week; no more than 24 times in a year |
| The FDA’s recommendation to blood establishments is that in the context of the donor history questionnaire male or female gender should be: A. by birth B. by self identity C. Both D. Neither | male or female gender should be self-identified and self-reported for the purpose of blood donation. |
Created by:
jfshikle
Popular Laboratory Science sets