Description
Blood letting might be an ancient practice, but in some cases it's still the ideal treatment.
One instance is in haemochromatosis, an inherited condition where the body absorbs too much iron.
Many patients still undertake blood letting at pathology centres where it can't be put to good use.
But they could be donating their blood — providing an iron-rich solution to low donation rates.
Guests
David, haemochromatisis patient
Peter Bentley, Adjunct Associate Professor, University of Western Australia Medical School
References
I've been told by my doctor that my iron stores (or my ferritin levels) are high. Am I eligible to donate?
Research study update: Beyond the iron gate, Australian Red Cross Lifeblood
Achieving optimal self-management in hereditary haemochromatosis: Results from a community questionnaire
A look at some of the Health Report correspondence this week.
You can email us at
[email protected]
Published 11/15/24
It has been 60 years since one of the pillars of medical ethics – the Declaration of Helsinki – was published.
For the most part, it is seen as a leading light for researchers doing clinical trials with human participants.
But some think one of the principles is misleading – the one that states...
Published 11/15/24
If your knees creak when you exercise, you might be concerned about what's going on in the joint.
But researchers have found there's nothing inherently wrong with exercising your noisy knees – especially when there's no pain involved.
Guest/s
Jamon Couch, physiotherapist and researcher at La...
Published 11/15/24