Iron deficiency among blood donors: experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Standard

Iron deficiency among blood donors : experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme. / Rigas, A. S.; Pedersen, O. B.; Magnussen, K.; Erikstrup, C.; Ullum, H.

In: Transfusion Medicine, Vol. 29, No. S1, 2019, p. 23-27.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rigas, AS, Pedersen, OB, Magnussen, K, Erikstrup, C & Ullum, H 2019, 'Iron deficiency among blood donors: experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme', Transfusion Medicine, vol. 29, no. S1, pp. 23-27. https://doi.org/10.1111/tme.12477

APA

Rigas, A. S., Pedersen, O. B., Magnussen, K., Erikstrup, C., & Ullum, H. (2019). Iron deficiency among blood donors: experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme. Transfusion Medicine, 29(S1), 23-27. https://doi.org/10.1111/tme.12477

Vancouver

Rigas AS, Pedersen OB, Magnussen K, Erikstrup C, Ullum H. Iron deficiency among blood donors: experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme. Transfusion Medicine. 2019;29(S1):23-27. https://doi.org/10.1111/tme.12477

Author

Rigas, A. S. ; Pedersen, O. B. ; Magnussen, K. ; Erikstrup, C. ; Ullum, H. / Iron deficiency among blood donors : experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme. In: Transfusion Medicine. 2019 ; Vol. 29, No. S1. pp. 23-27.

Bibtex

@article{7f59c63136b44bbda82882077df9996e,
title = "Iron deficiency among blood donors: experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme",
abstract = "Blood components collected from blood donors are an invaluable part of modern-day medicine. A healthy blood donor population is therefore of paramount importance. The results from the Danish Blood Donor Study (DBDS) indicate that gender, number of previous donations, time since last donation and menopausal status are the strongest predictors of iron deficiency. Only little information on the health effects of iron deficiency in blood donors exits. Possibly, after a standard full blood donation, a temporarily reduced physical performance for women is observed. However, iron deficiency among blood donors is not reflected in a reduced self-perceived mental and physical health. In general, the high proportion of iron-deficient donors can be alleviated either by extending the inter-donation intervals or by guided iron supplementation. The experience from Copenhagen, the Capital Region of Denmark, is that routine ferritin measurements and iron supplementation are feasible and effective ways of reducing the proportion of donors with low haemoglobin levels.",
keywords = "Donor, Iron deficiency, Iron supplementation",
author = "Rigas, {A. S.} and Pedersen, {O. B.} and K. Magnussen and C. Erikstrup and H. Ullum",
note = "Supplement: Donor Special Issue",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1111/tme.12477",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "23--27",
journal = "Transfusion Medicine",
issn = "0958-7578",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "S1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Iron deficiency among blood donors

T2 - experience from the Danish Blood Donor Study and from the Copenhagen ferritin monitoring scheme

AU - Rigas, A. S.

AU - Pedersen, O. B.

AU - Magnussen, K.

AU - Erikstrup, C.

AU - Ullum, H.

N1 - Supplement: Donor Special Issue

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Blood components collected from blood donors are an invaluable part of modern-day medicine. A healthy blood donor population is therefore of paramount importance. The results from the Danish Blood Donor Study (DBDS) indicate that gender, number of previous donations, time since last donation and menopausal status are the strongest predictors of iron deficiency. Only little information on the health effects of iron deficiency in blood donors exits. Possibly, after a standard full blood donation, a temporarily reduced physical performance for women is observed. However, iron deficiency among blood donors is not reflected in a reduced self-perceived mental and physical health. In general, the high proportion of iron-deficient donors can be alleviated either by extending the inter-donation intervals or by guided iron supplementation. The experience from Copenhagen, the Capital Region of Denmark, is that routine ferritin measurements and iron supplementation are feasible and effective ways of reducing the proportion of donors with low haemoglobin levels.

AB - Blood components collected from blood donors are an invaluable part of modern-day medicine. A healthy blood donor population is therefore of paramount importance. The results from the Danish Blood Donor Study (DBDS) indicate that gender, number of previous donations, time since last donation and menopausal status are the strongest predictors of iron deficiency. Only little information on the health effects of iron deficiency in blood donors exits. Possibly, after a standard full blood donation, a temporarily reduced physical performance for women is observed. However, iron deficiency among blood donors is not reflected in a reduced self-perceived mental and physical health. In general, the high proportion of iron-deficient donors can be alleviated either by extending the inter-donation intervals or by guided iron supplementation. The experience from Copenhagen, the Capital Region of Denmark, is that routine ferritin measurements and iron supplementation are feasible and effective ways of reducing the proportion of donors with low haemoglobin levels.

KW - Donor

KW - Iron deficiency

KW - Iron supplementation

U2 - 10.1111/tme.12477

DO - 10.1111/tme.12477

M3 - Review

C2 - 29024114

AN - SCOPUS:85031100025

VL - 29

SP - 23

EP - 27

JO - Transfusion Medicine

JF - Transfusion Medicine

SN - 0958-7578

IS - S1

ER -

ID: 189410826