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Indore: In MP’s Khandwa, a bid devoted to curbing blood shortages by linking it to religious tourism has borne fruit. The authorities here have offered free VIP entry into Omkareshwar Jyotirlinga temple since Feb in exchange for blood donations.
Health officials reported on Sunday, which marks World Blood Donor Day, that the initiative has helped the district in providing critical units to their blood bank and those of neighbouring districts as well.Driven by steady collection volumes that average roughly 150 units per week, the Khandwa district hospital blood bank is seeing a surplus. Official added It has transferred 150 units each to Betul, Dhar, and Burhanpur districts, 200 units to Barwani, and 80 units to Harda district in Madhya Pradesh.The overwhelming donor response has also allowed the facility to accumulate reliable reserves of rare blood groups, including AB-negative, O-negative, A-negative, and B-negative.The blood bank in-charge Dr Atul Mane attributed a significant mid-year surge in donations to the ongoing holy month of ‘Adhik Maas’ (Purushottam Maas), a sacred period in the Hindu lunar calendar associated with enhanced merit for acts of charity.
In the first fortnight of June alone, collections surpassed typical monthly averages. Official logs show that the Omkareshwar camp generated a record-breaking 497 units of blood by June 14, a considerable rise from the 168 units received in Feb, when the initiative was launched.Spearheaded by Khandwa collector Rishabh Gupta, the scheme offers pilgrims a chance to skip general queues that last three to four hours in exchange for a 20-minute medical donation process.
A dedicated five-bed collection facility operates near the temple site. Following donation, volunteers—who must be healthy individuals aged 18 to 60 weighing at least 45 kg—receive refreshments, a certificate, prasad, and a photograph of Lord Omkareshwar.The certificate immediately grants VIP entry for the donor and their family, allowing one healthy member to secure fast-track access for elderly relatives or young children.
According to Dr Mane, local monthly demand had spiked to 1,200 units following the establishment of the local medical college.While previous collection drives only met half the local requirement, the pilgrimage-linked model has secured a reliable regional surplus. Pre-planning is now underway to build a separate, standalone blood bank facility at the medical college to accommodate the growing reserves.





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