ABSTRACT

Giving Blood represents a new agenda for blood donation research. It explores the diverse historical and contemporary undercurrents that influence how blood donation takes place, and the social meanings that people attribute to the act of giving blood. Drawing from empirical studies conducted in the United States, Canada, France, Australia, China, India, Latin America and Africa, the book’s chapters turn our attention to the evolution of blood donation worldwide, examining:

  • the impact of technology advances on blood collection practices
  • the shifting approaches to donor recruitment and retention
  • the governance and policy issues associated with the establishment of blood clinics
  • the political and legal challenges of regulating blood systems.

This innovative examination moves the focus from individual explanations of rates of blood donation to a social, structural explanation. It will appeal to international scholars and students working in the areas of sociology, medical anthropology, health care, public policy, socio-legal studies, comparative politics, organizational management, health and illness, the history of medicine, and public health ethics.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Blood donation and the range of historical and institutional trajectories

part 1|69 pages

Technology and the evolution of blood clinics

chapter 1|15 pages

“What flows between us”

Blood donation and transfusion in the United States (nineteenth to twentieth centuries) 1

chapter 2|15 pages

History of transfusion in Africa

Who gave blood? 1

chapter 3|20 pages

Public health works

Blood donation in urban China 1

chapter 4|17 pages

The contaminated blood affair in France

A turning point in blood donation 1

part 2|55 pages

The institutional politics of donor recruitment

part 3|74 pages

The governance of blood donation

chapter 8|20 pages

Linking medicine, industry, science, and politics

The history of French blood donor deferral criteria 1

chapter 9|13 pages

Blood donation in Australia

Altruism and exclusion 1

chapter 11|20 pages

“She is my blood”

Donation and reciprocity in Trinidad 1

chapter |19 pages

Conclusion

Blood donation in the social world: toward a critical, contextualized paradigm of understanding