June 30, 2026
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India Discards 1Mn Units of Blood in 2017: Wasteful or Inevitable?

Over a million units of blood are discarded in India every year, according to Health Ministry data, reported The Times of India. This happens primarily because of poor storage facilities in the country, the report adds.

India’s annual requirement of blood is about 13 million units, while the country manages to collect about 10 million. The report cites the scenario to point out how the discarding is further adding to India’s blood shortage woes.

Some experts, however, disagree. Speaking with FIT, Dr RN Makroo, President of India Society of Transfusion Medicine, emphasises that WHO recommends that 1 percent of the population could participate in regular, repeated and voluntary blood donations.

In India, which has a population of over 1.3 billion, if only 5 million people could become voluntary and regular donors, the shortage would be taken care of, adds Dr Makroo.

Commenting further on the issue of storage, he says:
All storage facilities are in place, there’s nothing wrong with them. There is wastage of blood worldwide, it’s not specific to India.
In Canada it’s 7.6 to 9.3 percent, in Australia it is 5.7 percent, in India it’s again between 5-6 percent, points out Dr Makroo. The issues to be considered instead include blood safety during transfusion.
There are about 2900 blood banks all over the country. We are also a country with a huge population which means the numbers put over a period of time will be staggering. We need to change the mindset of people and concentrate instead on issues like blood safety during transfusion.
DR RN Makroo

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