Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students

Introduction: Blood donation remains the only source of blood and its components. This study aimed to assess the practices and perception of voluntary blood donation among Year 2 medical students of University Malaysia Sarawak and identified factors that hinder their willingness to donate. Materials...

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Main Authors: Amelia, Mohamad, Madzlifah, Ahadon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of Pathologists, Academy of Medicine Malaysia 2024
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/1/15-CPATH.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/
https://www.mjpath.org.my/
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spelling my.unimas.ir-470562024-12-27T07:15:24Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/ Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students Amelia, Mohamad Madzlifah, Ahadon RB Pathology Introduction: Blood donation remains the only source of blood and its components. This study aimed to assess the practices and perception of voluntary blood donation among Year 2 medical students of University Malaysia Sarawak and identified factors that hinder their willingness to donate. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study involved 118 respondents. A self-administered questionnaire was used, and data were recorded and analysed by using SPSS version 22. Results: Only 27.1% of the respondents had donated blood, while 72.9% never donated blood. Of 32 respondents who had donated their blood, 90.6% were on a voluntary basis. Barriers to donation included unfit to donate (37%), fear of needles (27%), not approached to donate (24%), religious restrictions (3%), fear of knowing health status after donation (3%), no remuneration (1%) and fear blood might be sold (1%). The majority of the respondents (92.4%) perceived that blood donation is a good act, 5.1% of respondents considered it a neutral act, while 2.5% perceived it as a bad act. A majority (79.7%) knew that voluntary donation was the best source of blood. Discussion and Conclusion: Despite the good perception towards blood donation, unfortunately, very few respondents had donated blood. Therefore, it is suggested that awareness-raising programs on the importance of voluntary blood donation should be planned and done so that more donors can be recruited and sufficient blood supply can be maintained. College of Pathologists, Academy of Medicine Malaysia 2024-12 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/1/15-CPATH.pdf Amelia, Mohamad and Madzlifah, Ahadon (2024) Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students. Malaysian Journal of Pathology, 46 (3). p. 480. ISSN 0126-8635 https://www.mjpath.org.my/ TM02
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic RB Pathology
spellingShingle RB Pathology
Amelia, Mohamad
Madzlifah, Ahadon
Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
description Introduction: Blood donation remains the only source of blood and its components. This study aimed to assess the practices and perception of voluntary blood donation among Year 2 medical students of University Malaysia Sarawak and identified factors that hinder their willingness to donate. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study involved 118 respondents. A self-administered questionnaire was used, and data were recorded and analysed by using SPSS version 22. Results: Only 27.1% of the respondents had donated blood, while 72.9% never donated blood. Of 32 respondents who had donated their blood, 90.6% were on a voluntary basis. Barriers to donation included unfit to donate (37%), fear of needles (27%), not approached to donate (24%), religious restrictions (3%), fear of knowing health status after donation (3%), no remuneration (1%) and fear blood might be sold (1%). The majority of the respondents (92.4%) perceived that blood donation is a good act, 5.1% of respondents considered it a neutral act, while 2.5% perceived it as a bad act. A majority (79.7%) knew that voluntary donation was the best source of blood. Discussion and Conclusion: Despite the good perception towards blood donation, unfortunately, very few respondents had donated blood. Therefore, it is suggested that awareness-raising programs on the importance of voluntary blood donation should be planned and done so that more donors can be recruited and sufficient blood supply can be maintained.
format Article
author Amelia, Mohamad
Madzlifah, Ahadon
author_facet Amelia, Mohamad
Madzlifah, Ahadon
author_sort Amelia, Mohamad
title Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
title_short Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
title_full Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
title_fullStr Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
title_full_unstemmed Practices and Perception of Voluntary Blood Donation Among University Students
title_sort practices and perception of voluntary blood donation among university students
publisher College of Pathologists, Academy of Medicine Malaysia
publishDate 2024
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/1/15-CPATH.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47056/
https://www.mjpath.org.my/
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score 13.223943