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January marks the start of a new year, but it is also National Blood Donor Month.
The beginning of the year is a critical period for those in need of blood transfusions as people tend to stop donating during the holiday season. The winter in general also experiences a dropoff as donors get sick more frequently.
With blood supplies running short, life-saving cancer treatments and surgeries like heart-transplants have to be pushed off.
Rodney Wilson, biomedical spokesperson at the American Red Cross, told Cheddar News that every two seconds someone in the U.S. needs a blood transfusion.
"It is a need that is coast to coast in every community across the country, and not enough people are donating. Only about 3 percent of the population has ever donated blood and yet most of us will need blood in our lifetime," Wilson said.
If you plan to donate blood, there are a few caveats to consider before heading to your local donation center. Participants must be at least 16 years old, weigh at least 110 lbs, and cannot donate more than six times a year with 56 days in between each donation.
The policy was changed again in 2020 shortly after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic when blood supplies were critically low to allow gay and bisexual men to donate if they hadn't engaged in sex with men in the last three months.
Data shows that 20% to 80% of women will develop fibroids by age 50. Cheddar News explains as Fibroid Awareness month allows people a chance to learn about the painful condition.
The heat wave continues to break records across the country with Phoenix recording 19 straight days of over 110 degrees as the southwestern cities are also coming close to records as well. Iran recorded a heat index of 152 degrees on Sunday with high temperatures affecting a big portion of the planet.
July is Fibroid Awareness Month, and it's an opportunity to raise awareness for uterine fibroids, a painful condition estimated to impact a staggering 26 million women nationwide. Cheddar's own Ashley Mastronardi spoke to one woman who shares her life-changing experience with fibroids.
High-water rescue crews pulled people from flooded homes and vehicles Wednesday in Kentucky, where waves of thunderstorms prompted flash flood warnings and watches. A search continued for two children swept away after torrential rains in the northeastern United States.
High temperatures continue to affect people in the U.S. and abroad, including in Iran where it reached 152 degrees on Sunday. The southwestern part of the U.S. continues to experience extreme weather after over a week of a heat wave.