American Red Cross


The American National Red Cross, sometimes referred to as ANRC, is a nonprofit humanitarian organization that provides emergency assistance, disaster relief, and disaster preparedness education in the United States. Clara Barton founded the organization in 1881 after initially learning of the Red Cross, founded 1863 in Geneva, Switzerland. It is the designated American affiliate of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
The organization has provided services after many notable disasters, including the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, World War I, the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, World War II, Hurricane Katrina, and the Maui wildfires of 2023. It also provides blood banking services.

History and organization

Founders

established the American Red Cross in Dansville, New York, on May 21, 1881, and was also the organization's first president. She organized a meeting on May 12 of that year at the house of Senator Omar D. Conger. Fifteen people were present at the meeting, Conger and Representative William Lawrence to discuss the start of the American Red Cross. The first local chapter was established in 1881 at the English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Dansville.
Jane Delano founded the American Red Cross Nursing Service on January 20, 1910.

Clara Barton

Barton founded the American chapter after learning of the Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1869, she went to Europe and became involved in the work of the International Red Cross during the Franco-Prussian War. She was determined to bring the organization to America.
Barton became President of the American branch of the society, known as the American National Red Cross, in May 1881 in Washington. The first chapters opened in upstate New York, where she had connections. John D. Rockefeller and four others donated money to help create a national headquarters near the White House. The abolitionist Frederick Douglass, a friend of Barton's, offered advice and support as she sought to establish the American chapter of Red Cross. As Register of Deeds for the District of Columbia, Douglass also signed the American Red Cross's original Articles of Incorporation.
The next major disaster was the Johnstown Flood on May 31, 1889. More than 2,200 people died, and thousands more were injured in or near Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in one of the worst disasters in U.S. history.

Progressive reform

Many within the organization became frustrated with Barton's leadership style, and Barton resigned from the organization in 1904.
Professional social work experts took control and made the group a model of Progressive Era scientific reform. New leader Mabel Thorp Boardman consulted with senior government officials, military officers, social workers, and financiers. William Howard Taft was especially influential. They imposed an ethos of "managerialism", transforming the agency from Barton's cult of personality to an "organizational humanitarianism" ready for expansion.
Among the notable disasters of the Progressive Era that featured American Red Cross involvement was the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912. The New York City chapter joined with the Charity Organization Society to provide funds to survivors and the dependents of those who perished.
The organization was active during World War I. Among its activities in Paris was the Studio for Portrait Masks, which fashioned galvanized-copper face masks for soldiers who had been facially disfigured during the war. During World War Two, the American Red Cross ran the Booker T Washington Service Club in Sydney, Australia.

Leadership

Recent presidents and CEO s include Gail J. McGovern, Cliff Holtz, Elizabeth Dole, Bernadine Healy, Mary S. Elcano, Mark W. Everson and John F. McGuire. In 2007, U.S. legislation clarified the role for the Board of Governors and that of the senior management in the wake of difficulties following Hurricane Katrina. Members of the board of governors other than the chairman are elected at the annual meeting of chapter delegates. The board appoints the chief executive officer. The president and CEOs' overall goal is to execute the Red Cross' strategies and missions to lead and oversee the business activities that the Red Cross partakes in or organizes.

Ranking

As of April 2023, the American Red Cross scores four out of four stars at Charity Navigator and A− at CharityWatch.
In 1996, the Chronicle of Philanthropy, an industry magazine, released the results of the largest study of charitable and nonprofit organization popularity and credibility. The study showed that ARC was ranked as the third "most popular charity/non-profit in America" of over 100 charities researched, with 48% of Americans over age 12 choosing "Love" or "Like A lot" to describe it.

Notable members

  • Charles R. Drew, First medical director for the Red Cross National Blood Collection Program in 1941.

    Blood services

Blood donation

ARC supplies roughly 45% of the donated blood in the United States, which it sells to hospitals and regional suppliers on a cost-recovery basis. In 2019, hospitals paid blood collection centers about $215 per unit of red blood cells. Community-based blood centers supply nearly 50% and approximately 5% is collected directly by hospitals. In December 2004, ARC completed its largest blood processing facility in the United States in Pomona, California, on the campus grounds of California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.

Tissue services

For more than 50 years, ARC provided allograft tissue for transplant through sales in its Tissue Services Program. It cared for thousands of donor families who donated tissue and sold the tissue to more than 1 million transplant recipients. At the end of January 2005, ARC ended its Tissue Services program to focus on its primary missions of Disaster Relief and Blood Services.

Plasma services

A leader in the plasma industry, ARC provides more than one quarter of the USA's plasma products.
In February 1999, ARC completed its "Transformation", a $287 million program that reengineered Red Cross Blood Services' processing, testing, and distribution system and established a new management structure.
As of 2011, ARC is no longer in the Plasma Services industry. It supplies Baxter BioSciences with items for manufacturing plasma products.

Nucleic acid testing

In 1999, ARC became one of the first American blood banks to implement nucleic acid testing. The NAT tests for HIV and HCV are licensed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. This process is different from traditional testing because these tests detect the genetic material of a transfusion-transmitted virus like HIV and hepatitis C, rather than waiting for the body's response to the disease by forming antibodies, potentially offering an important time advantage over current techniques.

Leukoreduction

help fight off foreign substances such as bacteria, viruses, and abnormal cells. In fact, these foreign leukocytes in transfused red blood cells and platelets are often not well tolerated and have been associated with some types of transfusion complications. Leukocytes in stored blood products can have a variety of biological effects, including depression of immune function, which can result in organ failure and death. Because whole blood is rarely used for transfusion and not kept in routine inventory, leukoreduced red blood supplies are critical. After collection, the whole blood is separated into red cells and plasma by a centrifuge. A preservative solution is mixed with the red cells and the component is filtered with a leukoreduction filter. The shelf life of this product is 42 days.
ARC is moving toward system-wide universal prestorage leukocyte reduction to improve patient care. From 1976 to 1985, the FDA received reports of 355 fatalities associated with transfusion, 99 of which were excluded from further review because they were unrelated to transfusion or involved hepatitis or HIV/AIDS. While the FDA has not yet made leukoreduction a requirement, ARC took a leading role in implementing this procedure with a goal of leukoreducing all blood products. More than 70% of ARC red blood cell components undergo prestorage leukoreduction, a filtering process performed soon after blood is donated.

Research

ARC operates the Jerome H. Holland blood laboratory in Rockville, Maryland.

Cellular therapies

ARC offers various cellular therapies; these treatments involve collecting and treating blood cells from a patient or other blood donor. The treated cells are introduced into a patient to help revive normal cell function, replace cells that are lost as a result of disease, accidents or aging, or to prevent illnesses from appearing. The ARC has implemented technology from Accellix, a biotechnology company specializing in automated cell phenotyping, in order to help meet the increasing demand and need for various cell and gene therapies. The ARC continues to work on further expanding their help and participation in cellular therapies and are always looking for donors who are willing and able to contribute to their mission.

Training services

Training Services is one of the five divisions of the American Red Cross, responsible for providing health and safety training to the general public as well as the workforce. In calendar year 2024 the American Red Cross trained 5.9 million people how to save lives through their programs. There are a wide variety of course offerings available:
  • Administering Emergency Oxygen
  • Advanced Life Support
  • Anaphylaxis and Epinephrine Auto-Injector
  • Asthma Inhaler Training
  • Babysitter's Training
  • Basic Life Support
  • Bloodborne Pathogens Training
  • California Child Care
  • CPR/AED for Professional Rescuers
  • Emergency Medical Response
  • First Aid/CPR/AED
  • Hands-Only CPR
  • Learn to Swim
  • Lifeguard Management
  • Lifeguarding
  • Longfellow's WHALE Tales
  • Nurse Assistant Training
  • Pediatric Advanced Life Support
  • Responding to Emergencies
  • Safety Training for Swim Coaches
  • Title 22
  • Water Safety
  • Wilderness and Remote First Aid
In addition to basic level certifications in the above courses, the American Red Cross also offers instructor-level courses. Instructor-level courses are designed to teach participants how to become instructors or instructor trainers for American Red Cross courses. Instructor Trainer Academies are designed to certify current instructors to become instructor trainers, or people who can teach instructor-level courses.
Training Services has an online store where you can purchase supplies including First Aid Kits, CPR key chains, flashlights, and emergency radios.