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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, October 02, 2001 |
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A precious donation
IT WAS a show of student power when the Tamil Nadu State AIDS
Control Society (TANSACS), along with the Chennai Corporation and
the University of Madras National Service Scheme, organised a
mega blood donation camp on World Blood Donation Day.
As the posters outside the camp pointed out, they had gathered to
``serve their country for donating blood and not shedding it''.
Mr. Christodas Gandhi, Director, TANSACS, gave the credit to
students who were volunteering to donate blood and the TANSACS
had a programme to fund universities by giving Rs. 10 lakhs to
set up blood donor clubs. The purpose was to show that there were
a number of voluntary donors and also to break the myth that only
relatives and friends were willing to donate blood for those in
need.
Mr. Gandhi said out of the three lakh units of blood collected in
the State per year, only 50 per cent was from voluntary non-
remunerative donors.
At today's camp, over 75 engineering, arts and science and
medical colleges and polytechnics participated. While a total
number of 4,000 donors were expected, by 10.30 a.m. over 1,200
had already registered. With 250 beds, 77 doctors and medical
officers, 85 technicians, 79 nurses and 82 assistants, including
multi-purpose health workers, the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium was
abuzz with activity.
Light music programmes highlighting the need for blood donation
were organised to entertain students waiting to give blood and
those having their post-donation refreshments.
Dr. B. Chandramohan, Project Director, Chennai Corporation AIDS
Prevention Control Society, said this would not be a one-time
exercise alone but donors would be given forms which would be
filled and handed over to blood banks. He said Chennai received
1.20 lakh units per year of which 65 per cent was voluntary. This
initiative is aimed to increase the voluntary donation to 75 per
cent this year with an ultimate goal to make it 100 per cent from
donors.
For Mr. Nanda Kishore, Mr. R. Muthukrishnan, and Mr. Lena
Kathiravan or for Dental college student Ms. Nandini, donating
350 ml blood has been a ``first'' but a happy experience.
By Akila Dinakar
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