at Cheonnam University Hospital in Gwangju, there's a longtime expat, and upstanding community member named Michael Simning who sick: the full diagnosis isn't out yet, but he needs blood.
All RH negative blood is rare in Korea: most Koreans have a positive RH, so there is often a demand, or shortage in negative blood types.
A few months ago, there was a call to give blood for a kid in Yonsei Severance Hospital, across facebook and other places. I wrote about my experience trying to give blood here, and I wrote about what one must do to qualify to give blood here. It will help if you bring a friend who speaks Korean: even in Seoul, the blood clinic folks barely spoke a stitch of English.
there's a facebook group called "Blood Connections" that shares information about blood donation in Kroea. They're a good group to contact for more information about what you have to do, to donate blood in Korea: the language gap can be a problem. There's more here.
The donation eligibility form is the same at any red cross clinic worldwide:
Take a look at this document. Read it carefully.
Take a look at this document. Read it carefully.
These two documents'll help you determine your eligibility.
In this article, and this one, I was told you need to meet these requirements to donate blood in Korea:
In this article, and this one, I was told you need to meet these requirements to donate blood in Korea:
1. You need to have an Alien Registration Card. Bring it, and be ready to present it.
2. You need to have been in Korea for a year.
3. You need to be able to answer some questions about your medical history... mostly the ones inthose two documents above... the guy at the Seoul Global Center, when I called in April, was pretty sure that you need to speak enough Korean to answer the medical history questions yourself, but when I went in person, the nurse did allow me to answer the questions through an interpreter. Some of the questions made my translator feel awkward -- "have you shared needles"? But if you can help save a guy's life, it's worth it, right?
I'm not sure who the best person to call for more information is, either at the hospital, or for gwangju-specific information - maybe a Gwangju-er could let us know in the comments? But that's a start.
ht: Brian in JND, Twitter, and the two or three people who have messaged me on facebook or by e-mail.
more about my blood donation experience here.
