Williams A E, Thomson R A, Schreiber G B, Watanabe K, Bethel J, Lo A, Kleinman S H, Hollingsworth C G, Nemo G J
American Red Cross Blood Services, Holland Laboratory, Rockville, MD 20855, USA.
JAMA. 1997 Mar 26;277(12):967-72.
Individuals who do not respond accurately to questions about infectious disease risk factors at the time of blood donation represent a potential threat to the safety of the blood supply. This study was designed to estimate the prevalence of undetected behavioral and other risks in current blood donors.
Anonymous mail surveys to collect demographic, medical, and behavioral information were administered to individuals who had donated blood within the previous 2 months. Sampling weights were used in the analysis to adjust for differential sampling and response rates among demographic groups to provide prevalence estimates for the donor population.
Five geographically and demographically diverse US blood centers.
A stratified probability sample of 50,162 allogeneic blood donors.
Estimated prevalence rates for risk behaviors that would have been a basis for deferral if reported at the time of the donor screening interview (deferrable risk).
Completed questionnaires were received for 34,726 donors (69.2% of the sample). A total of 186 per 10,000 respondents (1.9%) reported a deferrable risk that was present at the time of their past donation, while 39 per 10,000 (0.4%) reported this behavior within the 3 months prior to donation. Rates (with 95% confidence intervals [CIs]) of deferrable risk behaviors were 1.4 (95% CI, 1.2-1.6) times higher for men than women, 1.6 (95% CI, 1.3-2.0) times higher for first-time vs repeat donors, 2.7 (95% CI, 2.0-3.6) times higher for donors with reactive screening tests, and 7.6 (95% CI, 3.6-15.8) times higher for donors who used the confidential unit exclusion option.
Despite the high degree of transfusion safety in the United States today, a measurable percentage of active blood donors when assessed by anonymous survey report risks for human immunodeficiency virus and other infections not reported at the time of screening, suggesting the need for further refinements in the blood donor qualification process.
在献血时不能准确回答有关传染病风险因素问题的个体,对血液供应安全构成潜在威胁。本研究旨在估计当前献血者中未被发现的行为及其他风险的流行率。
对在过去2个月内献血的个体进行匿名邮寄调查,以收集人口统计学、医学和行为信息。分析中使用抽样权重来调整不同人口群体间的抽样差异和回复率,从而得出献血者群体的流行率估计值。
美国五个地理位置和人口构成各异的血液中心。
50162名异体献血者的分层概率样本。
如果在献血者筛查访谈时报告,本可作为延期献血依据的风险行为的估计流行率(可延期风险)。
共收到34726名献血者(占样本的69.2%)的完整问卷。每10000名受访者中有186人(1.9%)报告在过去献血时存在可延期风险,而每10000人中有39人(0.4%)报告在献血前3个月内有此行为。可延期风险行为发生率(95%置信区间[CI])男性比女性高1.4(95%CI,1.2 - 1.6)倍,首次献血者比重复献血者高1.6(95%CI,1.3 - 2.0)倍,筛查试验呈反应性的献血者高2.7(95%CI,2.0 - 3.6)倍,使用保密单位排除选项的献血者高7.6(95%CI,3.6 - 15.8)倍。
尽管如今美国输血安全性较高,但通过匿名调查评估时,仍有可测量比例的现职献血者报告存在筛查时未报告的人类免疫缺陷病毒及其他感染风险,这表明献血者资格认定过程需进一步完善。