As we approach a new year, let’s look back at the five most popular posts from the Research, Education and Discovery blog this year.
1. Forecasting red blood cell demand: Improving ordering strategies in hospital blood banksInnovative research undertaken by Dr. Na Li and the team at the McMaster Centre for Transfusion Research is harnessing electronic health data to improve demand forecasting and inventory management of red blood cells. |
2. Sepsis: The end is just the beginningImagine a cut on your hand gets infected. It gets hot, swollen, painful — but it means your immune system is fighting off that infection. Now imagine that happening throughout your entire body because the infection spread everywhere through your bloodstream. This is sepsis — a life-threatening blood infection. Read on to learn what we know and don’t know about sepsis, the link to COVID-19 and why we’re entering a new era of heightened interest in sepsis research. |
3. Investigating envelope viruses: Tissue factor clotting research earns a first-ranked CIHR Project GrantCould clues to the successful treatment of some of the world’s most challenging viral infections come from understanding how viruses interact with our body’s clot-creating proteins? Dr. Ed Pryzdial and his laboratory team at the Centre for Blood Research have dedicated their research efforts to answering questions like this; efforts that have recently earned funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). |
4. Science behind the scenes: Lay Science Writing Competition winners announcedThe Canadian Blood Services Lay Science Writing Competition supports our trainee network to develop communication skills by challenging them to showcase their research using plain language. |
5. Whole blood for transfusion: Development work supports operational feasibilityDevelopment work by Canadian Blood Services’ product and process development group lays the groundwork for greater operational flexibility for blood operators looking to introduce whole blood for transfusion.
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Canadian Blood Services — Driving world-class innovation
Through discovery, development and applied research, Canadian Blood Services drives world-class innovation in blood transfusion, cellular therapy and transplantation — bringing clarity and insight to an increasingly complex health-care future. Our dedicated research team and extended network of partners engage in exploratory and applied research to create new knowledge, inform and enhance best practices, contribute to the development of new services and technologies, and build capacity through training and collaboration. Find out more about our research impact.
Related blog posts
As we begin a new year, look back with us at the top five blogs of 2021. Unsurprisingly, pandemic-related information gained the most attention.
Canadian Blood Services’ Innovation and Portfolio Management annual progress report for 2021–22 is now available. The report recaps the collaborations in research and education that take place every day to support our shared purpose: to help every patient, match every need and serve every Canadian.
We teamed up with Science Borealis and the Centre for Blood Research to deliver the 2021-2022 Canadian Blood Services Lay Science Writing Competition. In a recently published blog post, Science Borealis interviewed the winner of that competition, Alexandra Witt, to learn about her creative process and how she crafted a winning piece of writing.