1. Blood donor return behavior in South Africa and the United States before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Jagirdar H, Nwobi NH, Swanevelder R, Cockeran R, Bruhn R, Kaidarova Z, Bravo MD, van den Berg K, Custer BS, Vassallo R, Ding Y, Panagiotoglou D, and Russell WA
- Subjects
- Humans, South Africa epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Blood Donors statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Background: Studies preceding the COVID-19 pandemic found that slower time-to-return was associated with first-time, deferred, and mobile drive blood donors. How donor return dynamics changed during the COVID-19 pandemic is not well understood., Methods: We analyzed visits by whole blood donors from 2017 to 2022 in South Africa (SA) and the United States (US) stratified by mobile and fixed environment, first-time and repeat donor status, and pre-COVID19 (before March 2020) and intra-COVID19. We used Kaplan-Meier curves to characterize time-to-return, cumulative incidence functions to analyze switching between donation environments, and Cox proportional hazards models to analyze factors influencing time-to-return., Results: Overall time-to-return was shorter in SA. Pre-COVID19, the proportion of donors returning within a year of becoming eligible was lower for deferred donors in both countries regardless of donation environment and deferral type. Intra-COVID19, the gap between deferred and non-deferred donors widened in the US but narrowed in SA, where efforts to schedule return visits from deferred donors were intensified, particularly for non-hemoglobin-related deferrals. Intra-COVID19, the proportion of donors returning within a year in SA was higher for deferred first-time donors (>81%) than for successful first-time donors (80% at fixed sites; 69% at mobile drives)., Conclusions: The pandemic complicated efforts to recruit new donors and schedule returning visits after completed donations. Concerted efforts to improve time-to-return for deferred donors helped mitigate donation loss in SA during the public health emergency., (© 2024 The Author(s). Transfusion published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of AABB.)
- Published
- 2024
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