The donors, including some who say the payments are their only income, may take home up to $400 a month if they donate twice a week and earn various incentives, including “buddy bonuses” for recruiting friends or family. Unlike other nations that limit or forbid paid plasma donations at a high frequency out of concern for donor health and quality control, the U.S. allows companies to pay donors and has comparatively loose standards for monitoring their health.
For poor people, selling plasma is good money. I did it many years ago.
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In medical school, we were always taught to use whole blood or packed red cells and sterile saline instead of plasma because it was so likely to be contaminated.
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