Using competition for plasma donor recruitment and retention: An Australian university case study

Author:

Bryant Jack1,Woolley Torres1,Sen Gupta Tarun1,Chell Kathleen2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Medicine & Dentistry James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

2. Research & Development Australian Red Cross Lifeblood Kelvin Grove Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesUsing evidence from one Australian university's participation in the Vampire Cup (an 8‐week national inter‐university blood donation competition), this study aimed to (1) understand important motivators and successful promotional strategies driving engagement in the competition, and (2) determine the impact of competition on the recruitment and retention of young adult plasma donors.Materials and MethodsWe used a sequential explanatory mixed‐methods design involving a self‐administered survey (Study 1, n = 64) and four focus groups (Study 2, n = 20) with plasma donors aged 18–29 years who participated in the 2021 Vampire Cup. Also, we used a 12‐month prospective comparative cohort analysis (Study 3) of those who did (n = 224 ‘competition donors’) and did not (n = 448 control group) present to donate for the Vampire Cup.ResultsCompetition was a strong motivator, with 76% of survey participants donating to help their university win the Vampire Cup. The survey and focus groups suggested that successful engagement in the competition was due to peer‐led recruitment, leveraging existing rivalries at both the inter‐ and intra‐university level, and using prize draws to create an active online social community promoting blood donation. Competition donors donated plasma significantly more often during the competition but donated at similar rates after the competition, compared to the control group.ConclusionRivalry‐based competition strategies, combined with enthusiastic team leaders and an active social media community, can help to recruit, and retain, young adult plasma donors, and motivate an intermittent boost to donation frequency over a short period each year.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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