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Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Jacobs, JW; Raza, S; Maynard, S; Shaz, BH; Tobian, AAR; Bloch, EM
Published in: Expert Rev Hematol
December 30, 2025

INTRODUCTION: Fragmentation across operations, data systems, governance, and regulation leaves many blood supply networks ill-equipped to provide timely, equitable, and crisis-resilient transfusion support. Public health emergencies, such as COVID-19 and natural disasters, have exposed the human and economic costs of these structural flaws, and how variability in practice about who can see and share data still impedes coordination even when the overall blood inventory is adequate. AREAS COVERED: This Critical Perspective examines blood supply coordination challenges in high-income countries, focusing on governance structures, operational isolation, regulatory inconsistencies, and data system incompatibilities. We analyze evidence from crisis events including pandemics, natural disasters, and mass casualty incidents to illustrate coordination failures and successful response models. The review synthesizes peer-reviewed literature identified through PubMed searches (January 2010 - September 2025), supplemented by regulatory documents, industry reports, and government policy analyses from blood regulatory agencies in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and other high-income countries. EXPERT OPINION: Effective solutions require coordinated interventions across multiple domains rather than isolated or localized improvements. Priority areas include governance structures that enable cross-institutional collaboration, interoperable data systems with standardized sharing protocols, regulatory frameworks that incentivize coordination, and value-based reimbursement models that reward system-wide performance.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Expert Rev Hematol

DOI

EISSN

1747-4094

Publication Date

December 30, 2025

Start / End Page

1 / 11

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3201 Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
  • 1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
  • 1102 Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
 

Citation

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Jacobs, J. W., Raza, S., Maynard, S., Shaz, B. H., Tobian, A. A. R., & Bloch, E. M. (2025). Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply. Expert Rev Hematol, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1080/17474086.2025.2610282
Jacobs, Jeremy W., Sheharyar Raza, Suzanne Maynard, Beth H. Shaz, Aaron A. R. Tobian, and Evan M. Bloch. “Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply.Expert Rev Hematol, December 30, 2025, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1080/17474086.2025.2610282.
Jacobs JW, Raza S, Maynard S, Shaz BH, Tobian AAR, Bloch EM. Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply. Expert Rev Hematol. 2025 Dec 30;1–11.
Jacobs, Jeremy W., et al. “Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply.Expert Rev Hematol, Dec. 2025, pp. 1–11. Pubmed, doi:10.1080/17474086.2025.2610282.
Jacobs JW, Raza S, Maynard S, Shaz BH, Tobian AAR, Bloch EM. Improving transfusion access through improved policy: a call for a less fragmented blood supply. Expert Rev Hematol. 2025 Dec 30;1–11.

Published In

Expert Rev Hematol

DOI

EISSN

1747-4094

Publication Date

December 30, 2025

Start / End Page

1 / 11

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3201 Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
  • 1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
  • 1102 Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology