A final year Microbiology student at Obafemi Awolowo University is fighting for his life at the OAU Teaching Hospitals Complex following a serious accident that left him with severe head and leg injuries, and doctors say the availability of B+ blood is now critical to his survival.
The student, whose identity is being withheld for privacy reasons, was involved in an accident under circumstances that are still being established. Medical personnel at OAUTHC have identified an urgent need for B+ blood as part of efforts to stabilise his condition. "The injuries are severe, especially to the head and leg. Doctors are doing everything they can, but the availability of blood is now crucial to his survival," a source close to the case said.
Fellow students in the Microbiology department have mobilised rapidly, circulating appeals across social media platforms and WhatsApp groups to find donors. One student volunteer described the situation plainly: "Every minute counts, and we are appealing to anyone with B+ blood to come forward."
Anyone with B+ blood who is willing to donate is urged to contact 0813 607 5458 immediately.
The emergency has also reignited a broader conversation about the persistent gaps in Nigeria's blood donation system, where emergency supply challenges regularly force patients' families and university communities to source donors independently rather than drawing on a reliable institutional reserve. Health advocates have long called for a culture of regular voluntary blood donation that does not depend on crisis moments to prompt action. "Situations like this highlight why we need a culture of regular voluntary blood donation, not just emergency driven appeals," a public health observer noted.
For a student who has nearly completed his degree, the next few hours may be the most consequential of his life. The OAU community and the wider public have an opportunity to change the outcome.
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