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Oslo blood bank faces shortage of African blood

The Local Norway
The Local Norway - [email protected]
Oslo blood bank faces shortage of African blood
Youmna (right) had an inherited form of sickle cell anaemia, and requires frequent blood transfusions. Photo: Oslo Blood Bank

Oslo's blood bank is calling for donations from Norwegians with foreign parents after developing a shortage of African blood.

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“The demand for rare or exotic blood has increased noticeably,” Lise Sofie Nissen-Meyer, the lead doctor at the bank, told Norway’s state broadcaster NRK. “We have a great need for more blood donors of foreign origin.” 
 
Norway’s strict criteria for blood donation effectively rule out first generation immigrants from Somalia and other African countries, where malaria and HIV are common. 
 
“Immigrants who have lived more than five years in African countries such as Somalia cannot be blood donors in Norway,”  Nissen-Meyer said. “But they can nonetheless have accidents or get diseases that mean they need blood.” 
 
This has made the bank desperate for donors with African backgrounds who have lived their whole lives in Norway. 
 
To qualify the donors cannot have spent over six months in an area where malaria is common, cannot have lived for over five years in sub-Saharan Africa and cannot have lived with anyone with hepatitis B.
 
“We have a great need for more blood donors of foreign origin. Because of the strict rules on communicable diseases, it is particularly second generation immigrants who are interesting for us,” Nissen-Meyer said. 
 
Distribution of blood types from the ABO system does not differ markedly between northern Europeans and Africans although African populations have a higher percentage of people with O-type blood, and a lower percentage of those with A-type blood. 
 
But, there are situations where the difference is more marked and more critical in healthcare terms. 
 
This means that Black Africans, such as those suffering sickle cell anaemia, who require regular blood transfusions may develop antibodies to certain blood groups common in people of Northern European origin and begin to require blood only from Black African or Black Caribbean donors. 

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