How strange many years ago i was told that i wouldnt be a fit candidate to donate as renal failure affects so many other organs and all the drugs we take dont help.
then once you've spent any time in Britain, they blacklist you.
Quote from: cariad on October 21, 2010, 05:16:22 PM then once you've spent any time in Britain, they blacklist you. Really??? I didn't know that! Why?
Quote from: MooseMom on October 21, 2010, 05:42:30 PMQuote from: cariad on October 21, 2010, 05:16:22 PM then once you've spent any time in Britain, they blacklist you. Really??? I didn't know that! Why?I think it's due to Mad Cow Disease.I found this on Yahoo Answers:"The group of people you are talking about are allowed to give blood in the UK, but not in some other countries such as the US. In the UK we figure that people here have already been exposed to plenty of prions (the infectious agent that causes mad cow disease) during the 80s and 90s, so it's not that much of an extra risk for them to get a blood transfusion from another British person. But people in countries that didn't have much BSE, such as the USA, have not been exposed to the disease in the same way that British people have. Therefore if they have a blood transfusion from a British person, there is a miniscule but real risk that they could be exposed to prions for the first time. Places like the USA are not prepared to take that risk. As far as I'm aware, 3 people in the UK have caught mad cow disease (it's called vCJD in humans) from having blood transfusions from an infected person. The important thing is that the person who donated the blood was fine at the time they gave the blood - the blood and other tissues are infectious before the person gets ill. Diseases caused by prions can have very long incubation periods, i.e. it may be decades before someone shows any signs."
Quote from: KICKSTART on October 21, 2010, 03:24:23 PMHow strange many years ago i was told that i wouldnt be a fit candidate to donate as renal failure affects so many other organs and all the drugs we take dont help.I wondered about this too, but then I thought - well I'll be dead, and let THEM make the decision. If they can't use them well they can't, but if there's a chance that they can use somehing of mine, then that's fantastic - even if I pass before I receive a transplant (hopefully unlikely ) I'd still like to think that I'm doing the right thing - not just because I so badly need an organ myself, but in general to make the effort to give something back.