“Man With The Golden Arm” Who Saved Millions Of Babies
Will Not Be Able To Give Blood Donations Anymore
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When James Harrison was 14, the doctors removed one of his lungs and kept him hospitalized for three months -
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During the difficult time, Harrison learned that he was alive largely due to the transfused blood he had received -
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To give back, he became a blood donor himself -
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During the next 60 years, James Harrison has made 1,173 blood plasma donations – 1,163 from his right arm and 10 from his left -
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Australian Red Cross Blood Service estimates that Harrison saved 2.4 million lives -
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Harrison has a rare antibody in his blood and in the 1960s he and health professionals used it to develop an injection called Anti-D -
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Anti-D is the main answer to a deadly problem called rhesus disease -
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Rhesus disease occurs when a pregnant woman has rhesus-negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD positive), inherited from its father -
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If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood, she may produce antibodies that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells -
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For the babies, it can result in brain damage or death -
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“I’d keep on going if they’d let me” said Mr Harrison. But he has surpassed the donor age limit and the Blood Service seeks to protect his health -
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James Harrison on his final donation, surrounded by Anti-D babies he saved -
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Mr Harrison was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in 1999. On Friday, he made his final benefaction -
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