9. Tie tightly the loose knot in the tubing or fold back the tubing and apply a sealing clip, about 20 cm from the needle.
10. Cut the tubing between the clamp and knot
11. Collect a blood sample from the donor into a plain tube for testing (grouping, HIV screening,
etc). Unclamp the tubing and allow 5–7 ml
blood to run out of the tubing into a tube or
vial. Reclamp the tubing.
12. Remove the pressure cuff. Take the needle out of the vein, applying pressure with cotton wool.
Ask the donor to continue applying pressure to the venepuncture site with his or her other hand. Dispose of the needle safely.
13. Mix the blood in the bag and push (‘strip’) the non-anticoagulated blood from the tubing into the blood bag. Mix and allow the tubing to refill with the anticoagulated blood.
14. Write clearly the identity number of the donor on the blood pack and sample tube(s). When a blood pack has already been given an identity number, e.g. from the blood transfusion service use this number on the sample tube(s). Do not
use the manufacturer’s lot or batch number
because this will be the same on several blood packs.
15. After making sure the bleeding has stopped, cover the venepuncture site with a pad of cotton wool and adhesive tape (advise the donor to remove the dressing the following day). Thank the person for donating.
16. Give the donor a drink (not alcohol) to make up his or her fluid loss.
Provide the donor with a dated certificate of blood donation and information concerning future donation.
17. Check that the blood pack and blood sample(s) have been labelled correctly and the same identity number is written on the blood donation certificate.
18. Refrigerate the blood after allowing time for it to cool and for natural bactericidal activity of white
cells (1–2 h). Do not leave a blood bag in direct sunlight. To avoid raising the temperature of the blood bank, first store the blood for 3–4 hours in another refrigerator (when the blood bank is
an absorption type refrigerator.