Blood products Impact

Blood products contribute to the saving of millions of lives every year, improve dramatically life expectancy and the quality of life of patients suffering from life-threatening conditions, and support complex medical and surgical procedures.

In high-income countries, blood products are most commonly used to support advanced medical and surgical procedures, including treatments of cancer and haematological diseases, trauma resuscitation, cardiovascular surgery and transplantation. In lower-income countries where diagnosis and treatment options are limited, a greater portion of blood is used to treat women with obstetric emergencies and children suffering from severe anaemia, often resulting from malaria and malnutrition.

In many countries, demand outstrips supply, and blood services throughout the world face the daunting challenge of making sufficient supplies of blood products available, while also ensuring the quality and safety of these products in the face of known and emerging threats to public health.

The health-related Sustainable Development Goals of reducing child mortality, improving maternal health and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases cannot be achieved unless significant attention is paid to the availability, safety and quality of blood products.

Blood products

A blood product is any therapeutic substance derived from human blood, including whole blood and other blood components for transfusion, and plasma-derived medicinal products.

Medicinal (medical therapeutic) products derived from human donations of blood and plasma play a critical role in health care. Safe, effective and quality-assured blood products contribute to improving and saving millions of lives every year, as they:

  • address child mortality and maternal health;
  • dramatically improve the life expectancy and quality of life of patients suffering from life-threatening inherited disorders, such as haemophilia, thalassaemia and immune deficiency, and acquired conditions such as cancer and traumatic haemorrhage; and
  • support complex medical and surgical procedures, including transplantation.

An insufficient or unsafe blood supply for transfusion has a negative impact on the effectiveness of key health services and programmes to provide appropriate patient care in numerous acute and chronic conditions. Ensuring access of all patients who require transfusion to safe, effective and quality-assured blood products is a key component of an effective health system and vital for patient safety.