Bleeding Out: ‘We want people to live’: How San Antonio is trying to prevent deaths from blood loss

By Lauren Caruba | Investigative Reporter Published Nov. 29, 2023 SAN ANTONIO — The way Dr. Donald Jenkins sees it, what saves lives on the battlefield could save lives on streets across America. During nearly 25 years in the Air Force, Jenkins operated on troops with devastating wounds from bombs and bullets — ones not so different than those that ordinary people sustain from cars, gun violence and random accidents. Injuries he saw from rollover crashes in combat zones are similar to those from high-speed highway wrecks. Gunfire tears through tissues and vital organs the same if it comes from an enemy combatant or a licensed gun owner. From his deployments, Jenkins knew that a single factor — bleeding, and how well it was controlled before patients landed on his operating table — dictated survival. Those who received blood quickly, especially on the way to the hospital, were more likely to remain stable during surgery and recover. Without it, death could come in a matter of minutes. The same is true for everyday Americans, who regularly bleed to death before doctors can repair their injuries. But unlike in combat zones, where military medics usually have blood on hand, in the U.S. there haven’t been any broad or comprehensive efforts to give blood to hemorrhaging patients before they arrive at a hospital. The best most paramedics can offer their patients is saline and medications that slow bleeding. Why not treat them the same, Jenkins wondered years ago, after he left the military and began a new medical career as a civilian. If patients needed blood when they arrived at the hospital, surely they needed it before then, too. Why not give patients blood as soon as possible, when they need it most? Five years ago, in San Antonio, a city with strong military ties, Jenkins finally got the chance to test his idea to put blood on ambulances and helicopters across the region. Today, Jenkins’ theory has turned into one of the country’s most innovative and pioneering models of advanced care, an example of how access to blood soon after a traumatic incident can save lives, some of the nation’s leading trauma researchers say. Across the U.S., a growing number of EMS providers have replicated parts of San Antonio’s blood program, helping critically injured patients in cities like Austin, New Orleans, Seattle, Oklahoma City and Pittsburgh and in South Florida — often with advice from San Antonio’s trauma leaders. “We have very openly exported all of our ideas, our protocols and our data,” said Jenkins, a trauma surgeon with UT Health San Antonio and University Hospital. “We’re not looking for a patent. We’re not looking to make money off of this. We just want to see people live.” Since the South Texas program’s start in 2018, more than 2,100 patients have received blood transfusions on the way to a hospital. Many were car crash and shooting victims, including a 37-year-old mother of two in San Antonio who was clinically dead after a car crash when blood revived her. There were also patients bleeding from pregnancy complications and other medical problems. We’re not looking for a patent. We’re not looking to make money off of this. We just want to see people live.” Dr. Donald Jenkins Early research from the program has found trauma patients who received transfusions before reaching a hospital were more likely to survive the immediate aftermath of their injury, which medical experts consider to be the most critical period. Longer term survival rates remain the subject of study. Already, there have been remarkable success stories, lives that likely would have otherwise been lost, according to the paramedics who treated them. They include a South Texas man who severed arteries in his arm while working with a tool at home and an oil field worker in his early 20s who suffered a partial leg amputation while working with a malfunctioning drill. “We’re providing the patients with what they need, when and where they need it,” Jenkins said. Every day, trauma physicians and paramedics confront a deadly public health crisis. Traumatic injury is a major cause of premature death, killing around 150,000 Americans each year, including more children and adults under age 45 than any other cause. In 2021, Texas led the nation in deaths from motor vehicle crashes and guns, federal data shows. A yearslong investigation by The Dallas Morning News and the San Antonio Express-News has found tens of thousands of these injured patients are dying from wounds they could have survived had they received crucial treatments sooner. Some of the nation’s most respected researchers estimate that, each year, 31,000 Americans bleed to death from survivable injuries, with lifesaving transfusions usually out of reach until patients arrive at a hospital. In more than 140 interviews, the news organizations found paramedics are unequipped to fully treat severe internal bleeding and patients receive drastically different care depending on where they are injured. After decades of inadequate federal funding for research and little attention by elected officials, outcomes for these patients remain poor and have stagnated over the past decade, the investigation found. Federal officials have failed to adopt major reforms that could save lives, even after being confronted in 2016 with growing evidence that large numbers of injured patients are needlessly dying every day. ‘Liquid gold’ The idea for San Antonio’s blood program began in a war zone in October 2001, on Masirah Island off the coast of Oman. There, Jenkins was the first surgeon to enter the combat zone, standing by as special forces parachuted into southern Afghanistan. Over the next two weeks, he treated dozens of injured troops. Back home, hospitals had stockpiles of dozens of blood components — oxygen-carrying red blood cells, circulation-promoting plasma and clot-facilitating platelets. Jenkins and the military medical team made do with what they had, tapping service members to give blood. When he gave this fresh blood to wounded troops, he was stunned by how quickly it worked. Before his eyes, they

Blood cancer treatment may cause cancer

GREEN BAY, Wis. (WBAY) – A life-saving cancer treatment may sometimes cause cancer. The FDA is investigating right now, saying it received 19 reports of new blood cancers in patients who received the CAR-T cancer treatment. CAR-T is short of Chimeric Antigen Receptors and the T-cells in your blood. CAR-T therapy was first approved in 2017 and involves removing a type of white blood cell from a patient’s blood. It’s also used when patients have already had at least one round of conventional treatment with intense chemotherapy and radiation. The FDA says patients who received this therapy should be monitored for new malignancies for the rest of their lives. Cancer specialists say CAR-T treatments have saved the lives of thousands of patients with blood cancers and the benefits outweigh the risk. The FDA says patients and health care providers who have questions can give the agency a call. Copyright 2023 WBAY. All rights reserved.

Callaway County Extended Employment to host blood drive

The Callaway County Extended Employment Center is partnering with the American Red Cross to host a blood drive on Monday. Marla Mason, general manager at the Callaway County Extended Employment Center, said appointments to donate blood can be reserved online. Walk-in appointments will also be accommodated. Appointments for regular blood donation and Power Red donation are available. Blood donors will receive a free t-shirt and a $10 Amazon gift card, Mason said. The blood drive will be 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dec. 4 at the Callaway County Extended Employment Center, 2611 N. Bluff St. in Fulton. To reserve an appointment to donate blood, visit https://www.redcrossblood.org/give.html/find-drive.

Israel clearly learnt nothing from France’s blood-soaked occupation of Algeria

It was sheer barbarism and savagery that brought an end to France’s brutal 132-year-long occupation of Algeria, and it is the same destructive force that will end Israel’s war against the Palestinians in Gaza. At the moment, though, it is clear that Israel has learnt nothing from France’s blood-soaked occupation of Algeria. Like the ongoing fight for the liberation of Palestine from Zionist rule, history still has much to write about the atrocities committed by French colonialists in Algeria during the occupation from 1830 to 1962. At least five million people were killed and hundreds of thousands were wounded in the struggle for independence. In 1959, French President Charles de Gaulle declared that the Algerians had the right to determine their own future. Despite so-called terrorist acts by French Algerians opposed to independence and an attempted coup in France by elements of the French army, an agreement was signed in 1962, and Algeria was finally independent. Algeria is still known as the Land of a Million Martyrs, a figure far too conservative, according to those who live in Africa’s largest country today. As for France, it has learned little or nothing from its legacy as a brutal occupier and the terrorism that its occupation of Algeria fostered. READ: Erdogan tells UN chief that Israel must face international courts over Gaza crimes I now wonder if Gaza has reached its “Algeria moment” in a 75-year conflict which ultimately created the conditions for the 7 October attack against the brutal and rapacious Zionist occupation state. The scale of the attack has traumatised Israel and many within the Jewish diaspora. The ferocity with which the Hamas-led resistance fighters hit back has destroyed the arrogance and confidence of the Zionist State and its supporters in the same way that 9/11 knocked the stuffing out of the American swagger. Sadly, neither the US nor Israel took the time to catch their breath and ask why these events happened. The question was never asked and America’s response, as Israel’s will, went on to radicalise a generation of young people around the world. The so-called “War on Terror” crushed any semblance of respect for human rights, international law and the Geneva and Vienna conventions. Officially-sanctioned kidnapping and torture gave us the new 21st century euphemisms of “extraordinary rendition” and “enhanced interrogation techniques”. To their eternal shame, European countries looked the other way as the US intelligence agencies installed black sites for ghost detainees and tortured them on an industrial scale. US President George W Bush probably had no idea that he was about to embark on America’s longest ever war in his blind fury to get revenge by attacking the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, which, incidentally, played no part in 9/11. Twenty years and four presidents later, the war ended as spectacularly as it had started, when the biggest and most powerful army in the world fled, Vietnam style, and the Taliban returned to power in Kabul. READ: Aid entering Gaza is 5% of what entered before 7 October There are fears that Israel has been lured into a similar trap by Hamas, which is believed to have invested two years in planning the attack on the apartheid occupation state. The raging fury which erupted in Tel Aviv on 7 October was entirely predictable and probably had a lot to do with the catastrophic intelligence failure by the Israeli military which was caught napping by the audacious, daring breakout from the Gaza concentration camp by Hamas fighters belonging to the movement’s military wing, Al-Qassam Brigades. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was seen strutting around in his army fatigues like some aging Volodymyr Zelenskyy, threatening revenge of Biblical proportions on the Palestinian people. At times he still seems confused about who he is waging his bitter, vindictive war against: Palestine, its women and children, or Hamas; or all of them. One unhelpful government minister expressed the desire to “nuke” Gaza — he let the cat out of the bag and basically confirmed that Israel has nuclear weapons — so it’s little wonder that no one is focused on an end game. We need to know who will govern Gaza after the war and how it will be governed. This should be decided by the people of Palestine, not corrupt politicians in Israel and the West. World leaders have been bullied into silence while Israel commits war crimes as a matter of routine, bombing hospitals, UN schools and civilian infrastructure, and cutting off all water and power supplies to the civilian population. Thank God Queen Rania of Jordan stood up and spoke out for the Palestinian people; she exposed the “strongmen” across the Arab world as the cowards that they are. The cack-handed Americans took “shock and awe” to Iraq, leaving us incredulous that no one seemed to have given any thought to what was going to happen the day after the war. But no one had and the dire consequences remain today, along with one million widows and orphans dependant on humanitarian aid. The anger vented by film and TV writer Armando Iannucci was palpable when he wrote about this earlier in the year. Without a thought for the future, the US sacked all of Iraq’s civil servants, everyone in the Ba’ath Party, and anyone in charge of the civil police. It was all done in such a rush that no one thought about disarming the military, leaving hundreds of thousands of angry Iraqi army veterans to roam around with their weapons. READ: Israel freed captives testify to being treated ‘extremely well’ by Hamas I’ve seen the work that Hamas does in Gaza. Its military wing came along after its social, political and welfare arms were established. You only have to be there for a few days to understand how the country works, and that it couldn’t work without Hamas. The leadership has as many PhDs in government as any Western cabinet, and is loved by the people because they live alongside them and share their difficulties,

Blood cancers may arise from CAR-T cells, but experts think only in very rare cases

The announcement on Tuesday that the Food and Drug Administration was investigating whether CAR-T immunotherapy had itself caused blood cancers initially appeared to be a significant blow to one of the brightest spots in cancer care. But experts quickly cautioned that risk of this complication is probably minuscule compared to the known risk of secondary cancers from other cancer therapies like chemotherapy and radiation. They noted that CAR-T cells are immune cells that are genetically engineered to fight cancer, and that such genetic modifications were long thought to carry a risk of causing a second, new cancer in patients. The surprise, in a way, is that since CAR-T was first invented more than 10 years ago, that risk had remained just theoretical. advertisement “There’s been a requirement for long-term follow up. I think this is why we’re all surprised. As far as I think any one of us knew, it’d never happened with any of the FDA-approved CAR-Ts,” said Marcela Maus, a cell therapy researcher at Mass General Cancer Center. Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events. Subscribe

Pet Blood Bank needs more dogs to donate ahead of the festive season

A blood bank for pets needs more dogs to donate ahead of the festive season. Pet Blood Bank UK is just like the human blood service, but for dogs. They collect blood donations from donor dogs across the UK which help to save the lives of other dogs in need. Every donation a dog gives can help to save the lives of up to four poorly pups. The lifesaving blood can be accessed by all dogs across the UK should they ever need it. Stock levels of blood for dogs can get low over the holiday season. There are a dip in donations during the month of December as many people go away for the holidays and are busier than normal. Therefore people are being asked if their dogs can make a donation this Christmas. Pet Blood Bank’s next donation session is at Westways Vets in Houghton-Le-Spring on Sunday (December 3). Dogs, who are between the ages of 1 and 8, weigh over 25kg, are fit, healthy, confident, and enjoy meeting new people are being asked to register for blood stocks. The donation itself only takes 5-10 minutes, but owners should expect their dogs to be with the team for around 35-40 minutes. Dogs receive a full health check from the Pet Blood Bank vet before donating and get showered with treats, fuss, and attention throughout their appointment. They get a goody bag and toy to take home. If you are interested in registering your dog, or would like to book an appointment for the donation session at Westways Vets in Houghton-Le-Spring on Sunday, please visit www.petbloodbankuk.org or call 01509 232222.

Pregnant Las Vegas mom battles rare blood cancer, hopes to save unborn child

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – A Las Vegas mother of three who is pregnant again is fighting for her life and the life of her unborn child. Right now, she is the hospital in Southern California battling a rare blood cancer and spoke to FOX5′s Kim Passoth via Zoom. “I have to beat cancer because I have three kids that need me,” Aryanna Brewer contended. Brewer is a stay at home mom for her six-year-old, four-year-old, 18-month-old. Brewer was told she wouldn’t be able have kids after beating cancer as a teenager. At 16, she fought acute lymphoblastic leukemia undergoing chemotherapy for two and a half years. Earlier this year, Brewer learned she was carrying her fourth child. “I am 24 weeks pregnant,” Brewer revealed. Lately, the mom-to-be felt sick but dismissed it as part of her pregnancy. “The symptoms are like fatigue, shortness of breath, so I am thinking this has to do with being pregnant but then I come to find out I’m anemic which is a big sign that leukemia has come back especially if you a history,” Brewer explained. Two weeks ago, Brewer confirmed the cancer had come back. “When we finally got to the point where they did the bone marrow biopsy that was it, they saw my bone marrow was 90% cancer,” Brewer stated. Brewer’s doctors told her she will need a bone marrow transplant that they don’t do in Las Vegas. Brewer reached out unsuccessfully to facilities in Utah and Arizona. UCLA said they could help. “Right now, I am on a floor that is just blood cancer which I’ve never seen before. Tomorrow I am going to be getting a chemotherapy that goes in your spine,” Brewer reported. Brewer will be in hospital for a month of chemo. Then if she is in remission, Brewer will undergo 28 days of immunotherapy. “Then we would be looking at delivering the baby early by C-section…recovering 4-6 weeks…and then after that the bone marrow transplant,” Brewer said. Brewer will fight for her own life and also to save her unborn child. “We are going to check her heartbeat every day, every Monday they are going to check her growth. If there is a chance that its safe and we can do it then we want to try,” Brewer shared. Right now, Brewer is looking for a bone marrow match and is asking friends, family, and everyone to sign up for free testing. Learn more here: How to join the donor registry | Be The Match Brewer’s family has started a GoFundMe page to help with expenses during her cancer battle: Fundraiser for Aryanna Brewer, Fight Against Leukemia (gofundme.com) Copyright 2023 KVVU. All rights reserved.

Blood drives at Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton Community Center next week

The American Red Cross urges donors to give thanks and give back by making a plan to give blood or platelets next week at two blood drives in Hancock County. Basco Immanuel Lutheran Church, 921 N. Co. Rd. 1900, Carthage, will be hosting a blood drive from 12-5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 4, and Hamilton Community Center, 1680 Keokuk St., Hamilton, will host another Tuesday, Dec. 5, from 11:30 a.m. — 5 p.m. This time of year is traditionally hard on the nation’s blood supply. Seasonal illness, winter weather and holiday celebrations often lead to lower appointment numbers and decreased donor turnout, making it hard to keep up with the demand for blood products. When they give now, donors can ensure patients have access to lifesaving blood and platelets through the end of the year. The public can schedule an appointment now by using the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visiting RedCrossBlood.org or calling 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767).

Sir Elton John to address MPs after HIV testing trials success

By Jack Fenwick & Adam SmithBBC Politics PA Media Sir Elton John has campaigned on tackling HIV Opt-out blood tests for HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C will be rolled out to a further 46 hospitals across England, the government has announced. Health Secretary Victoria Atkins said the new £20m programme would lead to earlier diagnoses and treatment. It comes ahead of a speech by Sir Elton John at an event in Parliament. The rock legend will urge ministers to do more to hit the target of eliminating new HIV cases in England by 2030. Ms Atkins and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer are also expected to speak at the event. Under the scheme, anyone having a blood test in selected hospital A&E units has also been tested for HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C, unless they opted out. The trials have been taking place for the last 18 months in 33 hospitals in London, Greater Manchester, Sussex and Blackpool, where prevalence is classed by the NHS as “very high”. Figures released by the NHS earlier show those pilots have identified more than 3,500 cases of the three bloodborne infections since April 2022, including more than 580 HIV cases. Following the government’s announcement, opt-out testing will now be available in areas such as the West Midlands, Liverpool and Leicester, where HIV prevalence is classed as high. Ms Atkins said: “The more people we can diagnose, the more chance we have of ending new transmissions of the virus and the stigma wrongly attached to it.” She added that rolling out the tests to more hospitals would help ensure early diagnoses so people “can be given the support and the medical treatment they need to live not just longer lives but also higher quality lives”. Sam, whose real name is not being used, lives in Greater Manchester and is in his 40s. Last year, he had a blood test after going to A&E following an accident. “I got a phone call two days after being in A&E,” he says, “just saying to me we’ve got some concerns about a blood test that was done at the time. They asked me to come in and do some further tests. “I hadn’t realised about the opt-out testing at the time, so I wasn’t expecting a phone call from a health clinic. I thought it was about a survey or something about my experience in A&E.” After a two-week wait, Sam was diagnosed with HIV. “Had that test not happened, I may not be here today” “It felt like this was happening to somebody else. I wasn’t expecting it. My family don’t know, and I don’t want to cause them any distress. “And I feel maybe their lack of knowledge about the HIV virus and the 80s and how things were then, it makes me a lot more reluctant to tell them.” The opt-out trials were designed to identify cases in people unlikely to get tested at a sexual health clinic and are based on similar bloodborne infection testing programmes already in place for pregnant women. The NHS says 42% of HIV diagnoses in the UK are made late, when the immune system has already been significantly damaged. Sam now takes one tablet a day and goes for a check-up every six months. “The rest of my life is completely as it was before,” he says. But that’s not the case for everyone. Jackie, who lives in the West Midlands where HIV prevalence is high but opt-out testing is not available, was given a late diagnosis. “Nobody had got a clue what was wrong with me,” she says. “Losing my hair, losing weight, thrush in my mouth and I kept going back to the GP. And it wasn’t until my breathing got so bad, which was a few years down the line, they put me in hospital.” Doctors still could not figure out what was making Jackie so ill. Then eventually, they decided to carry out an HIV test. She believes there were opportunities much earlier on when she could have been given a test. What is HIV? HIV stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus – which weakens the immune system More than 94,000 people are living with HIV and accessing care in England Very successful treatment means most people affected can live long, healthy lives HIV medication reduces virus levels so much that passing on the virus to sexual partners is now only a tiny risk HIV diagnoses went up from 3,118 in 2021 to 3,805 in 2022 Most of that rise is down to people previously diagnosed abroad being given a diagnosis and care on arrival in England. Those diagnosed late tend to be women, who are less likely to take an HIV test Overall, more and more people are accessing tests as well as pills to reduce chances of getting HIV through sex Sir Elton, whose Aids Foundation played a key role in pioneering opt-out testing, will be speaking at an event in Parliament later hosted by the all-party parliamentary group for HIV and Aids. The event has been organised to mark World Aids Day and the end of Sir Elton’s touring career, and he is expected to specifically mention opt-out testing. Getty Images Sir Elton John and his husband David Furnish at a fundraising event for Aids Foundation with singer Rina Sawayama Sam is supportive of further opt-out testing, but believes more could be done to make clear that people are being tested in the first place. “I’m very happy that I went through it now,” he says. “At the time, I did feel a little bit ambushed. I felt that maybe some of my rights had been taken away from me. I thought that was my choice to make. “However, it’s obviously worked in my favour because I don’t know for a fact I would have said yes or no to that test.” Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox. BBC in other languages

New Cabell County EMS program helps trauma patients get blood sooner

HUNTINGTON — Cabell County Emergency Medical Services (CCEMS) is the first in West Virginia to administer blood before patients arrive at the hospital. It’s called the prehospital ground transport blood administration program and is in partnership with St. Mary’s Medical Center (SMMC). The program will serve as a model for other West Virginia services. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.