James Harrison, a prolific Australian blood donor famed for having saved the lives of more than two million babies, has died ...
"It wasn't one big heroic act. It was just a lifetime of being there and doing these small acts of good bit by bit." When he ...
James Harrison, an Australian man who saved the lives ... but it causes her antibodies to destroy her baby’s blood cells, which can be fatal. Since Anti-D was discovered in the 1960s, it has ...
An Australian man credited with saving 2.4 million babies through his record-breaking blood plasma donations over six decades ...
Known as the 'man with the golden arm', James Harrison's blood contained a rare antibody that saved millions of lives.
By donating blood over 1,100 times, James Harrison helped develop Anti-D, a life-saving treatment for newborns at risk of ...
James Harrison, a retired state railway department ... The disease is most common when a woman has an Rh-negative blood type and her baby's is Rh-positive. Australia has only 200 anti-D donors.
James Harrison looks at 8-month-old Layla and her ... a pregnant person's blood is incompatible with that of their unborn baby, prompting their immune system to attack it. According to Lifeblood ...
James Harrison donated blood and plasma 1,173 times every two weeks between 1954 and 2018, he never missed an appointment.
James Harrison, a prolific Australian blood donor ... a pregnant woman has rhesus-negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD positive), inherited from ...
Harrison, whose plasma contained a rare antibody, rolled up his sleeve 1,173 times from 1954 to 2018. The Australian is credited with helping 2.4 million babies and advancing scientific research.