Red Cross Announces Emergency Blood Shortage: 'Donors Are Urgently Needed'

Mar. 15, 2025

Stock image of a person donating blood.Photo:PhotoAlto/Odilon Dimier/Getty

Person donating blood

PhotoAlto/Odilon Dimier/Getty

The American Red Cross has announced a blood shortage, stating the national inventory has “plummeted more than 25% in July.”

On August 5, the agency said that blood drives have been impacted due torecord-setting heat,in a time when summer vacation and other seasonal activities often impact the turnout in drives.

As a result, “due to the supply of type O blood being so low, the organization has had to reduce distributions of this vital blood type in recent weeks to below hospital comfort levels,” the agency announcedin a press release.

That blood type is crucial, theagency says, as Dr. Barry Siegfried, medical director of the Red Cross Michigan Region explains in a release: “It’s critical that hospitals have both type O positive and O negative blood ready to go for patients in the most life-threatening situations.”

Stock image of a blood donation drive.Jon Cherry/Getty

An empty donation table with the American Red Cross logo is seen at the KFC YUM! Center during the Starts, Stripes, and Pints blood drive event on July 7, 2021 in Louisville, Kentucky

Jon Cherry/Getty

“Type O is especially important for people injured in accidents and other trauma who receive emergency care. Donors of all blood types can help ensure hospital shelves are restocked to prevent patient care from being impacted.”

The agency stressed that “donors are urgently needed now.”

As the Red Cross explains, Type O negative blood has no antigens, so it“won’t trigger an immune response,even if the recipient has a different blood type.”

However, only 7% of the population has this type of blood.

Stock image of a person getting a blood transfusion.Anastassiya Bezhekeneva/Getty

Girl sitting in an armchair with an infusion system in hand dresses blood.

Anastassiya Bezhekeneva/Getty

In January, the Red Crossfaced a similar shortage, when the nonprofit said they’d experienced the “lowest number of people giving blood in the last 20 years.”

There are eligibility requirements for blood donation, but for the most flexible type of donation —whole blood donation, the type most commonly solicited at blood drives — donors need to be at least 16 years of age, and weigh a minimum of 110 lbs.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

These donations take about an hour.

source: people.com