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IRC Infuses New Life into Iraq Blood Bank
27/04/2009

Wassit, Iraq 16 Dec 2008 - Before last October, patients who needed urgent medical care in Wassit province often relied on family members to rush to Baghdad—over 100 miles away—to secure pints of precious donated blood. Now, thanks to an infusion of support from the International Rescue Committee, Iraqis in this rural area no longer need to race against time to ensure their loved ones receive lifesaving treatment.

The IRC and local partner Todya recently refurbished and expanded Wassit’s regional blood bank, previously too small to store enough blood to meet demand. The bank had space for just three beds, which meant only three donors at a time could give blood. 

The blood bank’s staff had been struggling to assist roughly 1,750 people each month—many of them patients requiring donated blood for surgery, emergency care or transfusions for ailments such as anemia. The overwhelming demand left many patients’ families no option but a harrowing journey to a distant blood bank in the country’s capital.

“Relatives of those who needed blood faced daunting challenges trying to transport blood themselves,” says Aidan Goldsmith, the IRC’s program director in Iraq. “Often the blood spoiled due to the lack of proper transportation and excessive heat.”

With the IRC’s help, the Wassit blood bank has been outfitted with a new laboratory and new storage units. Construction freed space for a larger donation center, a distribution hall and administrative offices, and it reduced the threat of contamination posed by cramped quarters. (The bathroom and waiting room had been on the same floor as the blood storage facilities.)

The IRC also ensured that the staff of the blood bank received training in best practices in nursing and blood handling and storage so that they can meet emergency needs in Wassit and four neighboring provinces.

“Now that the improvements are complete,” Goldsmith says, “people will have access to services that are crucial to their very survival and well-being.”