Population-based projections of blood supply and demand, China, 2017-2036.
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2020
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Abstract
To estimate the long-term effect of the changing demography in China on blood supply and demand.We developed a predictive model to estimate blood supply and demand during 2017-2036 in mainland China and in 31 province-level regions. Model parameters were obtained from World Population Prospects, , and records from a large tertiary hospital. Our main assumptions were stable age-specific per capita blood supply and demand over time.We estimated that the change in demographic structure between 2016 (baseline year) and 2036 would result in a 16.0% decrease in blood supply (from 43.2 million units of 200 mL to 36.3 million units) and a 33.1% increase in demand (from 43.2 million units to 57.5 million units). In 2036, there would be an estimated shortage of 21.2 million units. An annual increase in supply between 0.9% and 1.8% is required to maintain a balance in blood supply and demand. This increase is not enough for every region as regional differences will increase, e.g. a blood demand/supply ratio ≥ 1.45 by 2036 is predicted in regions with large populations older than 65 years. Sensitivity analyses showed that increasing donations by 4.0% annually by people aged 18-34 years or decreasing the overall blood discard rate from 5.0% to 2.0% would not offset but help reduce the blood shortage.Multidimensional strategies and tailored, coordinated actions are needed to deal with growing pressures on blood services because of China's ageing population.
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yu2020populationbasedbulletin
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| Authors | Yu, Xiaochu;Wang, Zixing;Shen, Yubing;Liu, Zhong;Wang, Hongjie;Zhang, Shumei;Gan, Jia;Xue, Fang;Han, Wei;Shi, Xin;Hu, Yaoda;Wang, Lei;Li, Ning;Wu, Peng;Yang, Cuihong;Jiang, Jingmei; |
| Journal | bulletin of the world health organization |
| Year | 2020 |
| DOI |
10.2471/BLT.19.233361
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