JBSA-FORT SAM HOUSTON –
Donating blood to the Armed Services Blood Program is safe, simple and it saves lives. There is no substitute for it, and the donors around Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston know it.
Last year, a record-breaking 10,418 donors participated in 308 blood drives at the Akeroyd Blood Donor Center and mobile blood drives around the installation.
This means the blood donor center staff was able to produce 7,095 units of blood and 1,060 units of platelets for the patients at the San Antonio Military Medical Center.
"This is an outstanding achievement for the donor center," said Maj. Warren Brown, officer-in-charge of the Akeroyd Blood Donor Center.
"The blood donor center's mission continues to be challenging year after year because we are responsible for providing blood to wounded warriors, family members, retirees and others receiving care at the San Antonio Military Medical Center. However, 2012 was a great year for the center."
According to Brown, that success was due in large part to the three medical training commands - the 32nd Medical Brigade, 937th Training Squadron and the Navy Medical Training Support Command - that provided motivation and encouragement to their Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen.
The recruiting and marketing team at the Akeroyd Blood Donor Center also played a key role in getting donors through the door.
"The dedication of our recruiting and marketing team was instrumental in increasing awareness and coordinating blood drives and additional platelet donors," Brown said.
"Our collection team, which is comprised of both military members and civilians, did an outstanding job getting donors processed in the limited time we have each day."
"Every year we focus on our trainee blood drives trying to keep up with blood demands at the hospital," said Staff Sgt. Thomas Beauchemin, noncommissioned officer-in-charge of the Akeroyd Blood Donor Center.
"These service members in training are young and healthy so the donor center depends on their participation. Each month, we try to collect as much as possible for our patients because there is a need for blood," Beauchemin said.
"We have trauma patients who need blood in emergency situations and transplant and cancer patients who may use blood every day," he added. "This means the donor center needs donors every day."
With today's advances in medical treatments and increasingly sophisticated procedures for trauma care and bone marrow transplants, the demand for blood continues to rise.
This past year, nearly 170 patients received blood at the San Antonio Military Medical Center as part of their treatment each month. These patients used more than 14,000 units of blood, platelets and plasma.
"For many of our command teams, it's more than sponsoring a blood drive - it's a point of pride for their units," Beauchemin said. "Collecting these donations meant we were able to provide more blood to our patients."
The lack of eligible blood donors continues to be a serious problem for both the military and civilian blood programs.
Travel, medications, diseases, and high-risk behaviors are among the few eligibility criteria that the Akeroyd Blood Donor Center must consider when screening potential blood donors.
Because of those factors, the military's pool of eligible donors varies between 45 and 55 percent. According to the AABB (formerly the American Association of Blood Banks), nationally, less than 10 percent of the U.S. population donates blood.
For the Armed Services Blood Program, about 20 percent of the eligible military population donates.
"Since blood cannot be made synthetically, it has to come from people's generosity. It's a vital community service that our students and staff are performing," Brown said.
"Military blood donor centers throughout the country rely on the generosity of volunteer blood donors to meet the critical blood product needs of their installations. Our students and training commands continue to respond to this need time and time again."
"We're asking our tenant units to come forward and sponsor more blood drives," Brown said.
To find an upcoming blood drive and schedule an appointment online visit https://www.militarydonor.com and enter the sponsor code "ABDC."
Walk-in donors are welcome at the center 7:30 a.m. to noon, Monday through Thursday and 7:30 to 10 a.m. Friday.
The center is located at Building 1240, Harney Road, behind Budge Dental Clinic on JBSA-Fort Sam Houston. For more information, call 295-4655/4989.
For more information about the Armed Services Blood Program or to schedule a donation, visit http://www.militaryblood.dod.mil.