Daley urges wider blood donation and spells out donor age limits for Jamaicans
Dennis Daley, who sits as Member of Parliament for Eastern Kingston, is asking Jamaicans from every walk of life to step forward and donate blood. In a brief video message, he walked listeners through the age brackets that decide who may roll up a sleeve, and he pressed the point that voluntary giving protects strangers as much as it might one day protect kin.
He opened by naming his seat, then moved straight to the substance of the appeal. Mr Daley said the standard band for donors runs from 17 years old to 60. Anyone who already gives on a regular timetable, he continued, may keep donating until the age of 65. For younger teenagers, the door is not closed: a 16-year-old may still present to donate, he noted, so long as a parent has agreed. The figures were offered in plain language so listeners could judge for themselves whether they fall inside the band.
He framed the appeal as a standing duty, not a reaction reserved for family crises alone. People should not wait until someone at home falls ill before they think about the blood bank, he argued. Building the stock through routine visits, he said, is what puts staff in a position to rescue lives when seconds count.
The clip does not name a specific venue, timetable, or mobile drive; it functions as a general shout-out from the legislator, rooted in his Eastern Kingston mandate but worded for the island as a whole.
Syndicated from MOH — Ministry of Health and Wellness (Video) · originally published .
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