CLEVELAND, U.S. The American Red Cross and blood suppliers reported a roughly 35% nationwide drop in blood inventory this month, officials said. Hospitals in Utah, Kansas, Colorado and Ohio reported critical shortages for types O and negative blood and adjusted transfusion priorities. Causes cited include widespread influenza, winter weather and holiday donation declines. Community drives, including a Jan. 21 Topeka event and an Evansville Pride drive scheduled Feb. 6, 2026, aim to replenish supplies. An Oklahoma lawmaker proposed a state-run 'vaccine-free' blood bank, a measure medical experts criticized as impractical. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Olivia Bennett and reviewed by editorial team.
Community blood drives, local hospitals, and blood suppliers benefit when donation campaigns increase available units, enabling timely transfusions and reducing strain on emergency and surgical services.
Patients requiring transfusions—trauma victims, surgical patients, mothers in childbirth, cancer patients and people with chronic conditions like sickle cell disease—suffer potential delays and constrained care due to reduced blood availability.
Nationwide blood shortage prompts regional donation appeals
WKYC 3 Cleveland KSNT 27 https://www.kkco11news.comSalt Lake City hospital suffering from 'critical' blood shortage as donations drop nationwide
KSTU NewsTalk 1280 WGBF
Comments