1. a) If on medical inquiry it is unlikely that the donor has been transfused, accept.
b) Received, or thinks they may have received, a transfusion of blood or blood components before 1st Jan 1980, accept – See 3 below if transfused abroad
c) If treatment with human immunoglobulin has been limited to small quantities of specific immunoglobulin as prophylaxis (e.g. rhesus, tetanus, hepatitis, immunoglobulin etc.), accept.
d) Treated with prothrombin complex (PCC) to reverse over-anticoagulation after 1st January 1999, accept.
2. Autologous Transfusion:
If only the donor's own blood has been used, accept.
3. Donor transfused in a country endemic for malaria or South American trypanosomiasis:
a) Check the Geographical Disease Risk Index. If transfused in an at risk endemic country and a validated malarial antibody test and/or (as appropriate) a validated test for T.cruzi antibody is negative, at least 4 months after exposure, accept. If transfusion happened after January 1st 1980, see point 4 below.
4. Donor transfused since January 1st 1980:
Discuss with the Designated Medical Officer who will decide if the donor may be accepted following a documented risk assessment. This must take into account the availability of alternative donors, the risks of vCJD transmission and the expected benefits of using a particular donor.
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