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I rather think that that isn't the reason it's not used. A 70% accuracy rate is just not good enough. Presumably it doesn't just mean that there are false negatives but also false positives, and just say that half the errors are of each type that means that 15% of people will be classed as vCJD positive when they aren't. Not a state of affairs that is acceptable.kmalc wrote: The test that has been developed is a diagnostic test, it tests for vCJD to up to 71% accuracy.
According to many people the reason they haven't implemented the test is that the government is concealing the real number of people who could possibly be affected by the disease. (Although the majority of people are not affected.)
We use blood here because we have no alternative. IVIG which comes from the States is in short supply both here and there as there is not enough to go round. There certainly wouldn't be enough red cells or whole blood if we didn't use our own. Also some blood products like platelets have a very short shelf life and transporting it around the world would be very expensive never mind that there wouldn't be enough of it.Anyone born in the UK after 1996 receives all plasma products from the USA.
We're really interested in why we even use blood here that other countries wouldn't.
And what's going to happen in a few years when everyone who is currently about 15 (ie born in 1996 and after) will be allowed to give blood. Will they gradually stop using older people's blood?
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