An unusual sort of business will soon open in Shelby, North Carolina. It will take over premises previously run by a flooring company, tucked in beside shops selling clothes, paint and fast food. But it will not sell anything itself. Instead, willing donors, paid around $40 a pop, will sit connected to an apheresis machine. Over the course of an hour, the machine will extract their blood, siphon out plasma and recirculate the remaining fluid. The plasma will then be made into medicines, such as clotting factors for haemophiliacs and intravenous immunoglobulins for those suffering from autoimmune diseases.
The plasma trade is becoming ever-more hypocritical

Related Posts

Passenger vehicle dispatches decline 9% to 3,21,840 units in August: SIAM
September 15, 2025
10:11 pm

Sixth tranche of auction for critical and strategic minerals to be launched on Tuesday
September 15, 2025
4:10 pm

Nirmala Sitharaman says regulations should foster technology innovations, not wipe them out
September 15, 2025
10:09 am