Journal article
International blood collection and storage: Clinical use of blood products
DW Greening, KM Glenister, RL Sparrow, RJ Simpson
Journal of Proteomics | Published : 2010
Abstract
Human blood transfusion is the process of transferring blood or blood-based products from an individual into the circulatory system of another. From the theory of circulation of blood to the early practice of blood transfusion, transfusion medicine has been an important concept for many centuries. The practicality of transfusion, however, only became a possibility during and shortly after the Second World War. Today, blood and its derivatives play a critical role in worldwide health care systems, with blood components having direct clinical indications. Over the past several years worldwide organizations including the World Health Organization (WHO) have made a number of substantial improvem..
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Awarded by Australian National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We wish to thank Drs. Rebecca Cardigan (National Blood Service, England), Pieter van der Meer (Sanquin Blood Service, The Netherlands) and Jason Acker (Canadian Blood Service, Canada) for the information about blood component collection and processing in their countries. Funding was provided, in part, by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council under Program Grant 487922 (RJS, DWG) and a University of Melbourne Post-Graduate Student Scholarship (DWG). We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Jacqui Glenister in the preparation of Fig. 1.