Originally posted by: Xylitol
because then, the number of donators would vastly shrink (dunno why chrome says donators is spelled wrong)
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: Xylitol
because then, the number of donators would vastly shrink (dunno why chrome says donators is spelled wrong)
How so?
Originally posted by: eits
because the definition of a donation is to give something without any reward
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: eits
because the definition of a donation is to give something without any reward
They give you cookies and juice. So is it really donation?
Originally posted by: Superrock
It's a bad system imo because they make money off of the blood you donate. Because of this system they're constantly harassing you with phone calls if you donate once.
Originally posted by: Andrew1990
I never gave blood before, but do you get as many cookies as you want or is there a limit? Also, on the orange juice, is it the good stuff or the concentrate? I may consider giving blood depending on these questions.
Originally posted by: Scouzer
i'd also imagine they don't pay because they don't want junkies donating blood.
Originally posted by: mxrider
Originally posted by: Scouzer
i'd also imagine they don't pay because they don't want junkies donating blood.
this
and people strapped for cash would just go from blood bank to blood bank and donate blood, and eventually mess up their bodies.
getting paid for it just seems like an all around bad idea, imo
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: Xylitol
because then, the number of donators would vastly shrink (dunno why chrome says donators is spelled wrong)
How so?
Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: Xylitol
because then, the number of donators would vastly shrink (dunno why chrome says donators is spelled wrong)
How so?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...d_vs._A_Friendly_Favor
People are actually more inclined to donate for free than to donate for a small amount of money. The payment would have to be fairly high to encourage enough people to donate to offset this strange facet of human nature. Yes, it's totally counter-intuitive, but if blood banks gave small payments to donors they would likely receive fewer donations, not more.
Originally posted by: DayLaPaul
You can get money for selling plasma, which is better than selling blood since your body replenishes it much faster. More trips = more money.
Originally posted by: DayLaPaul
You can get money for selling plasma, which is better than selling blood since your body replenishes it much faster. More trips = more money.
Originally posted by: Freshgeardude
Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: Xylitol
because then, the number of donators would vastly shrink (dunno why chrome says donators is spelled wrong)
How so?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...d_vs._A_Friendly_Favor
People are actually more inclined to donate for free than to donate for a small amount of money. The payment would have to be fairly high to encourage enough people to donate to offset this strange facet of human nature. Yes, it's totally counter-intuitive, but if blood banks gave small payments to donors they would likely receive fewer donations, not more.
while that could be true, in this economy people out there are willing to do many things for money, so that example of the lawyer in that wiki article wouldnt happen. lawyers in most cases, such as my dad, wont do work that wouldnt provide income. reason being, he is allways busy in his office so if he could be working on something that provides income vs something that wont, he would take the one that gives him money