Sunday, July 29, 2012

Lowest Blood Supply in 15 Years and How General Blood Can Help


I saw this recent headline that the blood supply was at its lowest level in 15 years. This is quite interesting because our population has only grown dramatically since 1996. The article blames the low supply on the weather and the fact that Fourth of July fell in the middle of the week which of course is utter nonsense. Donations of blood have been increasing at 3% per year while demand has been increasing closer to 6%-8% per year.

What the article failed to mentioned was how the American Red Cross has a monopoly on the supply of blood. I go back to one of the basic principles of economics: when there is a shortage look to incentives to determine the cause. A few weeks ago while waiting in a doctor’s office I read this article about how a company called General Blood is trying to change that. General Blood buys blood cheap from blood centers and then distributes them overnight to hospitals all over the United States. Blood is also worth different prices in different markets. For example a pint might be worth $210 in Wisconsin while $265 in New Jersey.  

The market for blood is a $4.5 billion business and currently the Red Cross controls 44% of this. As a result every year 1.3 billion pints of blood go to waste (between 5%-14%). Apparently 1 pint of blood can save three lives. So in theory the amount of wasted blood adds up to 3.9 billion people. Surgeries One thing the blood market doesn’t have is an exchange which would make it much more efficient to match types of blood, what areas need blood first, and the best way to get blood to where it needs to go in the shortest amount of time possible.  The federal regulations with blood are burdensome ridiculous and should be scaled back since real people are suffering and even in some cases dying because they are unable to get blood in a timely fashion.

One hope this is on the horizon is artificial blood. This article claims that artificial blood could be here within the next decade or so but I won’t hold my breath. The blood would just be a temporary place holder for people in emergency situations which would be positive.

The position the government takes on regulation the sale of organs, blood, and everything else under the sun causes more harm than good. As I mentioned in this post about bone marrow, this post about kidneys, and this post about organ donation the government only gets in the way of people making voluntary choices about their own body. As economist Dr. Walter E. Williams would say the true test of whether you own something is whether or not you can sell it. According to the government we do not own our own body since we are able to be compensated for our own body parts or organs and create a market for them. 

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