Receiving blood from blood bank for lung cancer surgery
According to the Red Cross webpage and emails I have received, donors cannot give blood if they have taken experimental vaccines or drugs. ALL of the Covid “vaccines” are experimental, not totally approved by the FDA, and do not even meet the criteria for a vaccine according to the CDC. But I have been told by several at the Red Cross that they do not even ask anyone if they have had the shot(s). It does stay in a person’s blood, thus blood clots, etc. So facing lung cancer surgery has now been magnified by trying to find blood donors who have not had the shots or finding a hospital that uses the cell saver machine.
Correction:
Blood from vaccinated donors is safe for patients
With COVID-19 vaccines, the mRNA or viral-vector vaccine is broken down quickly once it enters the body’s cells and there is no evidence that transfused blood collected from donors who were previously vaccinated with COVID-19 vaccine poses any harm to patients.
From the Red Cross website:
The Red Cross is following FDA blood donation eligibility guidance for those who receive the COVID-19 vaccination. Deferral times for donations may vary depending on which brand of vaccine you received. If you’ve received a COVID-19 vaccine, you’ll need to provide the manufacturer name when you come to donate. In most cases, there is no deferral time for individuals who received a COVID-19 vaccine as long as they are symptom-free and feeling well at the time of donation.
The following eligibility guidelines apply to each COVID-19 vaccine received, including boosters:
- There is no deferral time for eligible blood donors who are vaccinated with a non-replicating inactivated or RNA-based COVID-19 vaccine manufactured by AstraZeneca, Janssen/J&J, Moderna, Novavax, or Pfizer.
- Eligible blood donors who received a live attenuated COVID-19 vaccine or do not know what type of COVID-19 vaccine they received must wait two weeks before giving blood.
Read more here: https://www.redcrossblood.org/local-homepage/news/article/covid-19-vaccination-guide-blood-donation.html
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Lung Cancer Support Group.
Hi @colleenyoung thank you for the insight, very helpful information.
@sueinmn thank you for your response. I am glad you were able to make the decision appropriate for you. Certainly everyone has the right to determine what is best for them. I have never and will never recommend a medication to anyone regardless of what I think. Instead, I will list the facts and allow that individual to decide because they only know their health history and lifestyle. I am always supportive of whatever decision an individual makes regarding the covid vaccine.
By the way you had included a VAERS website not a search engine. Search engines are installed on devices and not sent via a link. Thanks for the try. Best of luck to you.
I don't want to split hairs on semantics. Search engines are programs that search for and identify items in a database that correspond to keywords or characters specified by the user. Technically, I would call the VAERS site referenced earlier ( https://vaers.hhs.gov/data.html) a searchable database. What remains regardless of the term used, is that VAERS collects patient reported adverse effects, catalogues them and makes them publicly available. For that I am grateful.
Excuse me, but I spoke with Red Cross officials as well as email communications. They don’t even ASK if a person has had a Covid “vaccine.” When I asked why it wasn’t a deferral because it was experimental and not fully approved by the FDA, they had no answer.
Spot On Sue! I believe that there are many people who lack critical thinking skills, and some are truly not aware of how to distinguish a reliable source of info when they see one. (and sadly do not recognize unreliable sources of info) Another hampering factor is that not trusting the vaccines is that these same non-critical thinkers are not math savvy. They are not realizing percentage-wise how minimal the adverse effects can happen vs saving lives.
Living as a covid 'Long Hauler' is no picnic either. One beautiful young mother ended her life recently because she has suffered the horrible side effects of having had covid. She felt horrible for 13 months and could see no end in sight. She decided she couldn't take it any more. She left behind an infant child and grieving husband.
Suicide is death, plus added guilt and grief for the family.
So right Terri, my daughter refuses to get the vaccine for reasons that are beyond my comprehensions. She is usually an intelligent person, of an analytical type of mind, and certainly has no strange political beliefs against this vaccine. Just refuses to get it and insists she will not become sick. She does wear a mask and practices social distancing to the extreme. She has become almost a hermit! I simply can't get through to her.
That's what is so sad. I am just grateful that my kids and grands all got theirs. We have family members on both sides of the aisle, and all are vaccinated. We're almost all still speaking to each other. ha ha. The big test will come when we gather here at my house for the first time in 5 years on Aug. 29th for a family get together. Isn't that wild? We all adore each other, but not each other's politics. This was a tough grind. I hope that your dear daughter remains well. And that our luncheon goes well. Should they inspect my food? LOL
@lizzier- Good morning. My family has run into this with a family member. We've had some rows too! And that family member was one out of the family so he was surrounded. So what we did was declare any get-togethers politically safe haven. No political discussions!
Since it's your house, it's your rules! Doncha think?