Achieving 100% voluntary blood donation! It is not an easy task. On the way to achieving it, there are many roadblocks which have to be faced and taken care of. Of these many problems, the very prominent one during the summer is the acute shortage during the season. (Read more here). Like mentioned before, they have to be faced and taken care of.
We are in urgent need of Bombay blood group donors for a lady named Bharti who has to undergo delivery but her Hemoglobin level is very low. As of now her situation is very critical and at least 5 units of blood will required to be transfused before her delivery. She is being admitted to MS Ramaiah Hospital, Bangalore. The Lady's family is poor and uneducated to help themselves.
Willing Bombay Blood Group donors can contact us at +91-9886064563 or mail us at sankalp.admin@gmail.com
After having an eventful day at Mangalore, the Sankalp Disha expansion team moved on to visit Bangalore's sister city of Mysore. Again sufficient background work and inputs from senior transfusion specialists from Bangalore meant that the plan was well in place for another day of extreme buzzing.
Taking Disha across Karnataka is an activity that will take some time to materialise. Sankalp however, has made a firm and sedate start to this activity. Phase 1 of the expansion plan is to visit the major medical hubs across Karnataka and understand the ground realities that exist there. With this idea in mind, a Sankalp team left for the coastal belt of Mangalore, Udupi and Manipal following it up with a visit to Mysore.
Sankalp's brainchild, Disha, which makes sure to network all major blood banks across Bangalore city with a single toll free helpline, i.e., 1062 was started off close to 3 years ago. With massive publicity campaigns and dogmatic acclimatisation to laid down policies and ideas, the helpline today has become indespensable for Bangalore city. Everyday 17 blood banks from across the city update their stocks and any person looking for blood just dials this single helpline number to get to know where the unit of blood is available.