this post was submitted on 18 Jan 2024
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Exactly.
Scenario: A person regularly donates blood for years and receives no benefit from it.
Later they need to receive transfusions due to surgery or medical emergency.
They are charged several thousand dollars for the transfusions, the same amount as a person who has never donated.
What is their motivation to donate again?
I wonder if the same trend exists here in the UK or other countries with national health service.
I must say paying people to give blood seems like a horrible idea, it incentivizers people with reasons not to give blood such as illness or drug use to lie. Sadly testing and screening isn't very effective so it would likely cause problems.
I'm from a country with universal health care that is paid via a tax levy that all pay.
We are not paid to donate but we are also provided transfusions for no charge as well.
We do not have the issues mentioned in this article.
We (India) have free healthcare for the poor and subsidised healthcare for everyone else. Blood will therefore be free / discounted at a government hospital, but private hospitals can charge money. Donors must not be paid (including gifts, coupons, etc.) in either case, but some hospitals give a card or token saying you get priority if you ever need blood at that hospital.
Being a selfless person and knowing you've helped someone?
Yes, the warm glow of altruistic service to the community is a strong one but it is often hard to maintain in the face of looming bankruptcy due to medical debt.
Did that change? At one time if you donated blood, you didn't charge if you later needed blood...
Yeah that isn't a thing now. I've never heard of it. Was that like the '60s?