56 Facts About Blood
By: LifeShare
Updated: February 5, 2013
-
4.5 million Americans will a need blood transfusion each year.
-
43,000 pints: amount of donated blood used each day in the U.S. and Canada.
-
Someone needs blood every two seconds.
-
Only 37 percent of the U.S. population is eligible to donate blood - less than 10 percent do annually.**
-
About 1 in 7 people entering a hospital need blood.
-
One pint of blood can save up to three lives.
-
Healthy adults who are at least 16 years old, and at least 110 pounds may donate about a pint of blood - the most common form of donation - every 56 days, or every two months.
-
Females receive 53 percent of blood transfusions; males receive 47 percent.
-
94 percent of blood donors are registered voters.
-
Four main red blood cell types: A, B, AB and O. Each can be positive or negative for the Rh factor. AB is the universal recipient; O negative is the universal donor of red blood cells.
-
Dr. Karl Landsteiner first identified the major human blood groups - A, B, AB and O - in 1901.
-
One unit of blood can be separated into several components: red blood cells, plasma, platelets and cryoprecipitate.
-
Red blood cells carry oxygen to the body's organs and tissues.
-
Red blood cells live about 120 days in the circulatory system.
-
Platelets promote blood clotting and give those with leukemia and other cancers a chance to live.
-
Plasma is a pale yellow mixture of water, proteins and salts.
-
Plasma, which is 90 percent water, makes up 55 percent of blood volume.
-
Healthy bone marrow makes a constant supply of red cells, plasma and platelets.
-
Blood or plasma that comes from people who have been paid for it cannot be used to human transfusion.
-
Granulocytes, a type of white blood cell, roll along blood vessel walls in search of bacteria to engulf and destroy.
-
White cells are the body's primary defense against infection.
-
Apheresis is a special kind of blood donation that allows a donor to give specific blood components, such as platelets.
-
Forty-two days: how long most donated red blood cells can be stored.
-
Five days: how long most donated platelets can be stored.
-
One year: how long frozen plasma can be stored.
-
Much of today's medical care depends on a steady supply of blood from healthy donors.
-
3 pints: the average whole blood and red blood cell transfusion.*
-
Children being treated for cancer, premature infants and children having heart surgery need blood and platelets from donors of all types, especially type O.
-
Anemic patients need blood transfusions to increase their red blood cell levels.
-
Cancer, transplant and trauma patients, and patients undergoing open-heart surgery may require platelet transfusions to survive.
-
Sickle cell disease is an inherited disease that affects more than 80,000 people in the United States, 98 percent of whom are of African descent.
-
Many patients with severe sickle cell disease receive blood transfusions every month.
-
A patient could be forced to pass up a lifesaving organ, if compatible blood is not available to support the transplant.
-
Thirteen tests (11 for infectious diseases) are performed on each unit of donated blood.
-
17 percent of non-donors cite "never thought about it" as the main reason for not giving, while 15 percent say they're too busy.
-
The #1 reason blood donors say they give is because they "want to help others."
-
Shortages of all blood types happen during the summer and winter holidays.
-
Blood centers often run short of types O and B red blood cells.
-
The rarest blood type is the one not on the shelf when it's needed by a patient.
-
There is no substitute for human blood.
-
If all blood donors gave three times a year, blood shortages would be a rare event (The current average is about two.).
-
If only one more percent of all Americans would give blood, blood shortages would disappear for the foreseeable future.
-
46.5 gallons: amount of blood you could donate if you begin at age 17 and donate every 56 days until you reach 79 years old.
-
Four easy steps to donate blood: medical history, quick physical, donation and snacks.
-
The actual blood donation usually takes about 10 minutes. The entire process - from the time you sign in to the time you leave - takes about an hour.
-
After donating blood, you replace the fluid in hours and the red blood cells within four weeks. It takes eight weeks to restore the iron lost after donating.
-
You cannot get AIDS or any other infectious disease by donating blood.
-
10 pints: amount of blood in the body of an average adult.
-
One unit of whole blood is roughly the equivalent of one pint.
-
Blood makes up about 7 percent of your body's weight.
-
A newborn baby has about one cup of blood in his body.
-
Giving blood will not decrease your strength.
-
Any company, community organization, place of worship or individual may contact their local community blood center to host a blood drive.
-
Blood drives hosted by companies, schools, places of worship and civic organizations supply roughly half of all blood donations across the U.S.
-
People who donate blood are volunteers and are not paid for their donation.
-
500,000: the number of Americans who donated blood in the days following the September 11 attacks.

