Pr And Marketing , Business Services

Addressing India's Blood Shortage, Abbott Launches an Awareness Campaign to Inspire India's Youth to Donate Blood

29.11.2023 - 12:16:06

Business Wire India


MC Headshot - ?Give Blood, Get Good Vibes"

  • One donation can save up to three lives and helps provide timely blood transfusion to people in need[1] – from accident victims, surgical and cancer patients to women during pregnancy and childbirth and for children with anemia
  • The campaign is a part of Abbott’s BETHE1™ global donor recruitment program and features a song by Indian hip-hop artist MC Headshot - “Give Blood, Get Good Vibes"
  • The song is aimed at inspiring youth to donate. 85.5% of Indian youth (aged 18-25 years) reported that they had never donated blood

While India has progressed considerably, there is still a gap in the country’s requirement of blood supply. As per current statistics, India requires an annual average of 14.6 million blood units, but there is a consistent shortfall of roughly one million units annually[2]. Addressing this, global healthcare leader Abbott has extended its worldwide donor recruitment campaign, ‘BETHE1,and launched the first-ever donor campaign song, ‘Give Blood. Get Good Vibes.’ This song aims to inspire Indian youth to donate blood, making blood donation a contemporary, compelling approach to build a healthier India. The vocals are by Tamojit Chatterjee, aka MC Headshot, an Indian hip-hop artist, rapper, lyricist, and stage performer.
 
Talking about this initiative, MC Headshot said, “I am proud to be a part of this campaign as it aims to help address a very real-life challenge. I hope that all the young people out there will become aware that they can make a difference. If you are healthy and able to donate, I urge you to do so and help save lives.”
 
The campaign supplements prior on-ground efforts to promote blood donation. The company had launched the campaign in major cities across India, including Mumbai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Kochi, Nagpur, Vizag, Guwahati, Nagpur, and Nashik, with digital and physical assets, mobile donation vans, and more. These sites record approximately 300,000 annual donations, with an encouraging rise in donations by over 20% this year.
 
India’s Demand-Supply Gap: A Blood Donation Deficit
 
India has an eligible donor population of 402 million, yet it falls short of meeting the WHO’s minimum recommendation of 1% of the population donating blood.[3] The country’s blood supply in 2022 was estimated at 33.8 per thousand donations, against the demand of 36.3 per thousand.[4]
 
Dr Rajesh B Sawant, Consultant - Transfusion Medicine, Histocompatibility & Immunogenetics, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital & Medical Research Institute, Mumbai, said, “One donation can save up to three lives,[5] and the process to donate blood typically only takes about 45 minutes to an hour. Addressing India’s blood deficit is essential to help avoid delays in critical blood transfusions for people in need. This can be done by raising awareness and tackling myths around blood donation, especially as there is a constant need for blood supply, not just for emergencies, but also for planned surgeries and long-term medical treatments.”
 
Voluntary blood donations are especially low in certain groups. While India has one of the youngest populations in the world, 85.5% of Indian youth (aged 18-25 years) reported that they had never donated blood. Further, only 10 to 12% of women are blood donors.[6] The reasons include low awareness, misconception that blood donation could endanger their health, lack of clarity about the process, and inaccessibility to blood donation sites.[7]
 

Blood donation – a powerful, life-saving behaviour – is key to treating women with complications during pregnancy and childbirth (like postpartum haemorrhage), children with severe anaemia, and supporting accident victims and surgical and cancer patients.This selfless act not only saves lives but also offers advantages for the donor, including a reduced risk of cancer, lower blood pressure, improved mental state, a healthy liver, and improved plasma lipid profiles.[10],[11] It is a simple way to make a difference in someone’s life and receive gratitude in return.
 
Addressing The Blood Shortage
 
Abbott’s global program BETHE1™ and ‘Give Blood. Get Back.’ campaign has made a significant impact around the world in countries such as the United States, and Ethiopia. In Europe, the campaign has reached potential donors in more than a half dozen countries including Germany, Italy and Greece. In India, Abbott aims to reach people under-represented in blood donor numbers, like the youth, through creative formats to drive positive behaviour change.
 
Dr Sonu Bhatnagar, Area Medical Director for Abbott’s transfusion medicine division said, “We believe that donating blood puts the power of saving lives and better health into the hands of everyone. Aligned with the government’s goals to raise awareness about the benefits of voluntary donation, our ‘Give Blood. Get Good Vibes’ song aims to inspire youth by making blood donation cool and putting it on top-of-their mind.”
 
The song can be heard here: www.bethe1donor.com/india.The video can be accessed on YouTube at Give Blood Get Good Vibes. People are encouraged to share their stories of blood donation on their social media channels, using the hashtags #GiveBloodGetGoodVibes and #BeThe1Donor.
 
Learn more about blood donation and become a donor by finding a center near you www.bethe1donor.com/india
 
About Abbott

Abbott is a global healthcare leader that helps people live more fully at all stages of life. Our portfolio of life-changing technologies spans the spectrum of healthcare, with leading businesses and products in diagnostics, medical devices, nutritionals and branded generic medicines. Our 115,000 colleagues serve people in more than 160 countries.
 
In India, Abbott was established in 1910, and is one of the country's oldest and most admired healthcare companies. With more than 12,000 employees in the country, Abbott is helping to meet the healthcare needs of consumers, patients, and doctors throughout urban and rural India.
 
Connect with us at www.abbott.com and www.abbott.in, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/Abbott and www.facebook.com/AbbottIndia, and on Twitter @AbbottNews.
 
This initiative is undertaken in the public interest by Abbott. Abbott is not biased towards any doctor or laboratory. Through this initiative, Abbott is neither promoting any doctor or laboratory nor inducing or influencing any doctors to use, purchase, order, recommend or prescribe any of Abbott’s medicines/products, nor will any doctor receive any favorable treatment.
 
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