Kathmandu, Nov 10: The Nepal Red Cross Society's Central Blood Transfusion Service has provided free Single Donor Platelets (SDPs) to Aashish Acharya, who is battling cancer. The Red Cross's executive director Umesh Dhakal and director of the transfusion service Dibyaraj Paudel reached the Nepal Cancer Hospital, Harisiddhi, and handed the Platelets worth Rs 25,000 to the parents of Aashish.
The hospital
director Swarupa Shrestha facilitated with the Red Cross to provide blood
to the cancer patient Aashish.
"We took the
son to Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute and Research Center in India where his
bone marrow was transplanted. Following this, problems occurred frequently.
Here in the cancer hospital in Nepal, it requires many platelets for him. It is
like a blessing for us that the Red Cross provides free platelets at a time
when the cells are scarce," said Aashish's father Keshab.
The Red Cross
has speeded up the production of the SDPs through apheresis following
increasing dengue cases, said Paudel. The service is available in a few parts
of the country, and the technology is expensive, he added.
Dengue and
cancer patients mostly require SDPs. So, the assistance of the federal and local
governments are expected to provide SDPs at concessional rates, he said.
According to
doctors, SDPs are more potent than Random Donor Platelets (RDPs). One unit of
SDP is equivalent to 6-8 units of RDPs. SDPs that are collected by a more
efficient system of component separation have a lesser chance of carrying other
components like RBCs. So, they are available to be transfused to a patient with
any blood group. (RSS)