Plain English Breakdown
The bill did not pass and has no legal effect as of the last action date.
Blood Donation Rules for Hospitals and Blood Banks
This bill requires blood banks to follow doctors' orders for specific patients to donate their own blood or designate blood for a particular patient's use, and allows hospitals to let patients provide such donations when ordered by a doctor.
What This Bill Does
- Blood banks must comply with a physician's order for autologous (donating one's own blood) or directed (designated for a specific patient) blood donation requests.
- Hospitals must allow patients scheduled for medical procedures to provide autologous or directed blood donations if ordered by their doctor, unless medically contraindicated or incompatible with safety standards.
- Both blood banks and hospitals can charge reasonable fees to cover the costs of handling these types of donations.
- Blood safety, testing, and compatibility requirements from federal and state laws still apply even when following this bill's rules.
Who It Names or Affects
- Patients who need medical procedures that might require blood transfusions
- Doctors who order autologous or directed blood donations for their patients
- Blood banks responsible for collecting, processing, storing, and distributing donated blood
- Hospitals where patients are scheduled to undergo medical procedures
Terms To Know
- Autologous Blood Donation
- When a person donates their own blood for future use by themselves.
- Directed Blood Donation
- Blood donated specifically for the use of a particular patient in advance of a planned medical procedure.
Limits and Unknowns
- The bill did not pass and therefore has no legal effect.
- It does not change federal or state blood safety, testing, or compatibility requirements.