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By Rebecca Dzombak Climate change is coming for something surprising: the world’s blood supply. Warming and extreme weather can slow blood donations, disrupt blood transport and risk the safety ...
Lifeblood researcher and UniSC Adjunct Research Fellow Dr. Elvina Viennet said this threatened the safety and supply of life-saving blood products crucial for surgeries, trauma care, chronic ...
while demand for blood could surge, a new study has found. Climate change might impact the supply and demand chain when it comes to blood transfusions, a new study has found. Researchers from ...
Climate-driven migration is also shifting demographics, creating urgent needs for more ethnically diverse blood donors. The gap between demand and supply is growing fast. The study urges a shift ...
Climate change and increasingly extreme weather are taking a toll on global supplies of blood, endangering the lives of people with life-threatening injuries and conditions, a new study has found.
Lifeblood researcher and UniSC Adjunct Research Fellow Dr. Elvina Viennet said this threatened the safety and supply of life-saving blood products crucial for surgeries, trauma care, chronic ...
Climate-related disasters such as floods, fires, and cyclones are increasingly jeopardizing blood donation and supply chains, according to the joint study by Australian Red Cross Lifeblood and the ...
Associate Professor of Practice in Supply Chain Management, University of Denver Rising prices and market volatility have led to food costs climbing to 11.4% of American’s disposable income ...
The agency OK’d an artificial vessel to restore blood flow in patients, even though its own scientists flagged questionable study results and potentially fatal ruptures of the product.