The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China

Abstract Background A nationwide ban on family/replacement donation (FRD) went into effect on April 1, 2018 in China. To date, no reports relevant to the trend of plateletpheresis donations before and after a nationwide ban on FRD were found. Methods We used two independent full samples, consisting...

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Main Authors: Jinyan Chen, Guoli Zhou, Xuemei Fu, Shijie Li, Ying Li, Jianxun Kang, Huiyou Chen, Liqiao Zhou, Yongshui Fu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10819-4
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spelling doaj-db9685930f8b49acb2cba94abe6e7cd52021-05-02T11:04:15ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-04-0121111110.1186/s12889-021-10819-4The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in ChinaJinyan Chen0Guoli Zhou1Xuemei Fu2Shijie Li3Ying Li4Jianxun Kang5Huiyou Chen6Liqiao Zhou7Yongshui Fu8Guangzhou Blood CenterClinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI), Michigan State UniversityChengdu Blood CenterGuangzhou Blood CenterChengdu Blood CenterChengdu Blood CenterGuangzhou Blood CenterGuangzhou Blood CenterGuangzhou Blood CenterAbstract Background A nationwide ban on family/replacement donation (FRD) went into effect on April 1, 2018 in China. To date, no reports relevant to the trend of plateletpheresis donations before and after a nationwide ban on FRD were found. Methods We used two independent full samples, consisting of 135,851 and 82,129 plateletpheresis donors from Guangzhou and Chengdu between October 2012 and September 2019, respectively. A pseudo-panel data approach was applied by grouping three time-invariant covariates – gender, blood donation history, and birth year across 14 cross-sections (a 6-month interval each) to form a total of 24 cohort groups (14 × 24 = 336 cohorts, i.e., cells) with each having common covariates. The outcome was average apheresis platelet units per donor in each cell. We performed a two-piecewise linear mixed model with the cross-section (i.e., time) just right before the ban as a time breakpoint (i.e., 11th cross-section) to examine the trend of outcome with the adjustment of three time-invariant covariates. We removed the FRDs in each of the first 11 cross-sections to detect its possible influence on the trend. Results The final model for the samples from Guangzhou presented a two-piecewise linear trend of the outcome over time with a horizontal line to the left of the breakpoint (βtimeBefore11 = 0.0111, p = 0.0976) and a significantly positive linear trend to the right (βtimeAfter11 = 0.0404, p < 0.0001). The male donors and the donors with plateletpheresis donation history had an increased baseline outcome and a significant outcome change over time after the ban. Such a two-piecewise linear trend pattern can be replicated using the samples from Chengdu with some minor variations. Removing the FRD before the ban can change the pattern. Conclusion The significant increase of the average apheresis platelet units per donor over time after the FRD ban may be related to the implement of the FRD ban and the improved donation behavior of male donors and/or donors with platelet donation history after the ban. Our findings may potentially motivate the policymakers in other countries where the FRD for plateletpheresis donation is still legitimate to phase out their FRD strategy and ultimately achieve 100% voluntary plateletpheresis donation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10819-4Plateletpheresis donationBan on family/replacement donationPseudo-panel data approachPiecewise linear mixed model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jinyan Chen
Guoli Zhou
Xuemei Fu
Shijie Li
Ying Li
Jianxun Kang
Huiyou Chen
Liqiao Zhou
Yongshui Fu
spellingShingle Jinyan Chen
Guoli Zhou
Xuemei Fu
Shijie Li
Ying Li
Jianxun Kang
Huiyou Chen
Liqiao Zhou
Yongshui Fu
The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
BMC Public Health
Plateletpheresis donation
Ban on family/replacement donation
Pseudo-panel data approach
Piecewise linear mixed model
author_facet Jinyan Chen
Guoli Zhou
Xuemei Fu
Shijie Li
Ying Li
Jianxun Kang
Huiyou Chen
Liqiao Zhou
Yongshui Fu
author_sort Jinyan Chen
title The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
title_short The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
title_full The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
title_fullStr The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
title_full_unstemmed The apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in China
title_sort apheresis platelet donation was increased after a nationwide ban on family/replacement donation in china
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background A nationwide ban on family/replacement donation (FRD) went into effect on April 1, 2018 in China. To date, no reports relevant to the trend of plateletpheresis donations before and after a nationwide ban on FRD were found. Methods We used two independent full samples, consisting of 135,851 and 82,129 plateletpheresis donors from Guangzhou and Chengdu between October 2012 and September 2019, respectively. A pseudo-panel data approach was applied by grouping three time-invariant covariates – gender, blood donation history, and birth year across 14 cross-sections (a 6-month interval each) to form a total of 24 cohort groups (14 × 24 = 336 cohorts, i.e., cells) with each having common covariates. The outcome was average apheresis platelet units per donor in each cell. We performed a two-piecewise linear mixed model with the cross-section (i.e., time) just right before the ban as a time breakpoint (i.e., 11th cross-section) to examine the trend of outcome with the adjustment of three time-invariant covariates. We removed the FRDs in each of the first 11 cross-sections to detect its possible influence on the trend. Results The final model for the samples from Guangzhou presented a two-piecewise linear trend of the outcome over time with a horizontal line to the left of the breakpoint (βtimeBefore11 = 0.0111, p = 0.0976) and a significantly positive linear trend to the right (βtimeAfter11 = 0.0404, p < 0.0001). The male donors and the donors with plateletpheresis donation history had an increased baseline outcome and a significant outcome change over time after the ban. Such a two-piecewise linear trend pattern can be replicated using the samples from Chengdu with some minor variations. Removing the FRD before the ban can change the pattern. Conclusion The significant increase of the average apheresis platelet units per donor over time after the FRD ban may be related to the implement of the FRD ban and the improved donation behavior of male donors and/or donors with platelet donation history after the ban. Our findings may potentially motivate the policymakers in other countries where the FRD for plateletpheresis donation is still legitimate to phase out their FRD strategy and ultimately achieve 100% voluntary plateletpheresis donation.
topic Plateletpheresis donation
Ban on family/replacement donation
Pseudo-panel data approach
Piecewise linear mixed model
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10819-4
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