AABB

For the funk band A.A.B.B., see The JB's.
American Association of Blood Banks (AABB)

AABB logo
Formation 1947
Location
President
Jay E. Menitove, MD[1]
Key people
Karen Shoos Lipton, JD
Affiliations National Blood Foundation (NBF)
Website http://www.aabb.org/
For the computer graphics term, see Bounding volume or Axis-aligned minimum bounding box.

The AABB is a United States-based professional body and standards organization that was founded in 1947 as the American Association of Blood Banks.[2] The organization is now international with members in 80 countries and has taken on a broader scope to include all of transfusion medicine as well as cellular therapies, specifically ones based on hematopoietic stem cells. In 2005 the organization changed its name to AABB to reflect the changes in scope and operations.[3]

The AABB works closely with the US Food and Drug Administration and provides technical input into the development of blood regulations for the US. While membership is not a regulatory requirement, virtually all major blood banks in the United States are accredited by the AABB. More than 80 percent of hospital transfusion services and similar facilities in the US are members.[2] Accreditation by AABB meets the requirements of the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) for blood bank, transfusion service, and immunohematology reference laboratory operations.[4]

The organization publishes a newsletter as well as a research journal named Transfusion, which is published through Blackwell Publishing.[5] Every three years the AABB publishes a Technical Manual; as of 2011 it is in its seventeenth edition. The organization also publishes a variety of other blood banking related materials, including the standards that it uses to accredit members.

Since 1953, the organization has operated a National Blood Exchange to facilitate transfers of blood between blood banks during shortages or when rare blood types are required.

The organization also accredits laboratories that perform parentage testing. These tests are primarily performed through DNA testing, but historically involved blood types. The AABB is the accrediting body for these DNA testing laboratories in the United States.[6]

References

  1. "2009 Annual Report_AABB". American Association of Blood Banks (AABB).
  2. 1 2 Who We Are
  3. "AABB name change". AABB. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  4. "Federal Register announcement showing continuing approval under CLIA" (PDF). National Archives and Records Administration.
  5. TRANSFUSION Journal Archived February 12, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "Genetic Relationship Testing; Suggesting DNA Tests" (PDF). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Retrieved 14 September 2012.

External links

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