
Audio By Carbonatix
Efforts at stocking blood banks in the country have received a big boost as Duraplast has extended a hand of support to Zipline to promote blood donation within the country.
As part of the support, Duraplast has presented a number of CD wash stations, and other company souvenirs and products to be given to donors during blood donation exercises.
Presenting the items, the Human Resource manager of Duraplast, Mr Alfred Farfo, says they were motivated by the vision of their company of giving back to society.
“Zipline is doing very well in their efforts at ensuring that there is adequate blood at all times to save lives. This is a worthy initiative of support and we are happy to be part.
"Zipline alone cannot do it as more blood is required on daily basis at the various health facilities. The items we have donated will not only be given to donors but also be used to store blood commodities under regulated temperatures at all times”.

Receiving the items on behalf of Zipline, Mabel Sekyere, the Community Lead at the Sefwi Wiawso distribution center, expressed her appreciation to Duraplast for responding to their call for support.
“Blood drives have become a regular calendar event for us at Zipline. Even though this is not a core mandate of our operations, we do it as part of our contribution to ensure that the National and Regional blood banks always have sufficient blood, part of which we deliver to our partner health facilities via our drones.
"Worldwide, blood donations have declined because of Covid-19 and its associated social distancing. Lives must still be saved and that is why we appreciate supports such as we have received from Duraplast, which we believe could serve as some incentives to those who join our blood drives”.
The world’s first and only national scale drone delivery service, Zipline has been undertaking blood drives within their operational communities as part of their Corporate Social Responsibility.
The Operations Lead for Zipline, Sefwi Wiawso Center, Dennis Agamah believes efforts such as the blood drive is what defines them as truly saving lives within their operational areas.
“Blood products are part of the over 100 medical commodities we deliver from this centre on a daily basis. In order to ensure that we continue to meet the demands of the health facilities we serve, we commit to going the extra mile to ensure that all products are available at all times. This is one of the reasons we do these regular blood drives”.
The partners encourage as many as are able, to continue to donate blood to save the lives of those who need them the most.
Latest Stories
-
Iran and US race to find missing American crew member downed in fighter jet
2 hours -
Gomoa Easter Carnival: Samini, Ofori Amponsah and Kwabena Kwabena rock Day 2; Obrafour and Kwaw Kese set for Day 3 showdown
2 hours -
‘Comical joke’: Atta Akyea disputes ‘personal account’ claim in former NSB boss Adu-Boahene case
2 hours -
Kenpong intervenes as Afua Asantewaa, husband reconcile after public scrutiny
2 hours -
“Pay this, pay that, and the patient dies” – Former UGMC boss demands end to cash-and-carry in emergency care
3 hours -
Free Primary Healthcare: Gov’t floods clinics with 24,500 medical tools ahead of April 15 launch
3 hours -
Agyarko bolsters NPP chairmanship bid with Henry Quartey and Osei-Owusu as campaign leads
4 hours -
Sky-high spectacle as 2026 Kwahu Easter Paragliding Festival takes flight
4 hours -
Asiedu Nketia supports AshantiFest 2026 art initiative with GH¢50,000
4 hours -
Former UGMC boss recounts ‘up and down’ hospital nightmare resulting in niece’s death
5 hours -
Artemis II crew take ‘spectacular’ image of Earth
6 hours -
Afenyo-Markin criticises high costs stifling Ghanaian startups
6 hours -
Afenyo-Markin slams school feeding contractors for snubbing local rice farmers
6 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Galamsey taxes, sole-sourcing probes, the Black Stars and presidential dialogue post-mortem
6 hours -
Guardiola wants Rodri to stay but says unhappy stars can go
7 hours
