Quiz: The Benefits of Giving Blood
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/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2022

Quiz: The Benefits of Giving Blood

Can you spot which of the following is a benefit of giving blood? Choose as many as apply.

  • When you give blood, you get a free medical screening. Staff will test to see if you are anemic, provide a blood pressure reading, and take your pulse and temperature. Plus, your donated blood will go through many screening tests, which may reveal potential health problems.
  • Giving blood may help reduce high iron stores in your body. Hemachromatosis is the most common genetic disease among Caucasians. Giving blood is the preferred treatment for the condition.
  • Even for people without hemochromatosis, the helpful iron-reducing aspect of giving blood may lower your risk of suffering a heart attack. According to a study by the published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, middle-aged men who donated lowered their risk of heart attack by 88%.
  • Some people, those with peripheral artery disease, even experienced reduced cancer risk after giving blood, compared to those who don’t.
  • Too much iron can also affect your liver, so giving blood helps you maintain a healthy liver too.
  • For those interested in weight loss, people who give blood are literally giving away calories, about 650 of them per pint. For every five times you donate, you could lose a pound (provided you change nothing else about your diet and exercise habits).
  • Donating blood is relaxing! You get to take a break and put your feet up in the middle of the day.
  • The American Red Cross and companies like Amazon sometimes offer incentives for donating.
  • You get choices. You can choose your donation type based on the amount of time you have or the people you would like to help most.
  • There are snacks. Need we say more?  
  • For tech heads, the American Red Cross app is on point. It is free to download, and you can schedule your blood donation appointment, fill out your RapidPass, and see where your blood goes and the impact of the donation.
  • Giving blood is a great way for busy people to make a difference in their community. No time to volunteer? No worries! It takes less than an hour every two months. If you book an appointment and use RapidPass, it’s even faster. And the time you spend actually doing the “giving blood” part, is just 10 minutes!
  • You might not be a hero, but you can save up to three lives every time you give blood. That has to make you feel great. Did we mention that you can even see the difference your donation makes by logging into the Red Cross app to see where your blood is being donated.
  • This is a self-esteem boost, because you are perfect for giving blood. Every blood type is needed, and the blood donation staff will praise you and thank you for coming in.

If you guessed all 14 are true benefits of blood donation, you are right! And any one of them would be enough to make blood donation worthwhile. Please visit https://www.redcrossblood.org/ to find a blood drive and donate as soon as you can.

Angela Theiss, MD, is a pathologist at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center, part of Southwestern Vermont Health Care, in Bennington. She is a regular blood donor.

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Interview with Jeff Silverman: 3D Printer

Jeff Silverman is a Wilmington native, a volunteer firefighter, and a business owner. From an addition to his Whitingham, Vermont, farm house, his company, Inertia Unlimited, develops camera technology for broadcast television.

"We make them out of thin air," he says.

Actually, he uses a 3D printer to make prototypes and one-of-a-kind cameras for very specific purposes, including those that sit in the dirt in front of a batter during Major League Baseball games and the ones built into NASCAR racetracks.

Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, Jeff has printed 463 face shields for first responders in the Deerfield Valley and healthcare workers at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center and other places. He has delivered them free of charge.

When and how did you first become interested in printing shields for first responders? In one day, every job we had disappeared. We went from having 20 – 30 jobs to zero in one day. Our first thought was that we would use the materials and talent we typically use to sew the pouches for our cameras to make masks. But we quickly found that the proper materials and techniques were not available to make effective masks. Plus so many other people were making them. They had it covered.

On Sunday, March 22, I read in the New York Times that a company in Syracuse, NY, had made a design to 3D print face shields available online. By noon that day I was printing. Since then the printer has not stopped.

How does it work? The printer converts the design into a 3D object using filament that is the width of a human hair, adding layer by layer. The printer takes 2 hours to print one shield. I have produced 380 shields so far. That's 1000 hours of printing. I take from midnight to 5 a.m. off. We've done more 3D printing in the last month and a half than we had in the previous 5 years.

Describe the shields. It was important to me to produce something that was good quality. Sometimes the ones you buy don’t clean up very well. These can survive UV light and other sterilization. They are rough and tough.

Where have you distributed them? First I gave them to the firefighters in Wilmington and Whitingham, where I am a volunteer. Then I gave some to the Deerfield Valley Rescue. I have sent 324 to Southwestern Vermont Health Care, some to SVMC Deerfield Valley Campus; Golden Cross Ambulance Service and Sojourns Community Clinic, both in Westminster, VT; and Rescue Inc. in Brattleboro. I sent some to a dentist in Portland, ME, who asked, and 10 to North Central Bronx Hospital to a friend who works there.

What's your greatest accomplishment? I went to Wilmington High School in the late 70s, and Dave Larson, who was the social studies teacher and former longtime VT state representative, had a video camera. He let me borrow it to film field hockey games. At the end of the season, they gave me a varsity letter for my film work. I have won Emmys since, but that varsity letter is special, because it represented the beginning.

What's next? We look forward to reopening. For us, it's the easiest thing in the world. No client ever comes here. We didn't lay anybody off. We hired locals. All are full-time with benefits. We think Vermont is a great place for low-impact companies like ours, and we hope more companies discover Vermont and come here to provide well-paid jobs.

And I am really looking forward to turning the printer off.

On behalf of Southwestern Vermont Health Care's frontline staff, thank you to Jeff for his tireless efforts to provide vital equipment to our teams. We appreciate it!

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