Blood donation quotas are expected to end in Beijing this year
after being in operation for nearly eight years.
Suo Liansheng, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the
Beijing Municipal People's Congress, made the remark at a press
conference on Thursday.
The Regulations on Mobilizing and Organizing Beijing Citizens to
Donate Blood, which took effect in 1998, encourage voluntary blood
donation and urge governments of various levels to set blood
donation quotas for social institutions and work units in the
city.
Given the huge clinical demand for blood in Beijing, it was
unrealistic to cancel the quotas in a short period of time, Zhang
Yin, an official with the Legal Affairs Committee of the local
legislature, was quoted as saying by Friday's Beijing
News.
"However, with the improvement of residents' awareness to
voluntarily donate blood, we are able to cancel the quotas," Zhang
said.
China's Law of Blood Donation, which became effective on Oct. 1,
1998, encourages voluntary blood donation.
Ninety-five percent of blood collected for clinical use in China
last year came from voluntary donation, according to the Ministry
of Health.
Figures released by the ministry show that voluntary donation
rose by seven percent in 2005.
In central China's
Henan Province, all of clinical blood use resulted from
voluntary donation. Only 75.46 percent of blood demand in Beijing
was met by voluntary donation, leaving the capital 22nd on the list
revealed by the ministry.
Voluntary donation is believed to be the safest way to obtain
blood. Experts say viruses like HIV and hepatitis are very unlikely
to be transmitted through voluntary donation.
But payment for blood is still seen in parts of the country and
some local governments set quotas for voluntary donation, according
to officials with the ministry.
The ministry will continue to promote voluntary blood donation
in the coming years, in a bid to expand a stable source of blood
donation and eliminate the purchasing of blood.
(Xinhua News Agency March 3, 2006)