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With the exception of blood derivatives (such as fractionated antibodies), all blood components are infective.
To combat all forms of marketing and gain with respect to blood and blood derivatives, under the principle that the human body is unalienable.
This acceptance of medical treatment in its widest sense is subject to the requirement not to accept transfusions of blood or blood derivatives.
This proposal also covers the important legislative initiatives in areas such as safety of blood and blood derivatives, and the implementation of wider anti-smoking campaigns.
Other amendments introduce the term 'blood derivatives' into the text of the directive; this cannot be accepted, because it might lead to confusion with 'medicinal products' .
It is responsible for the setting of standards for the quality and safety of organs and substances of human origins, blood and blood derivatives.
The supply of blood and blood derivatives, such as plasma-derived drugs, is a matter of life and death for many patients, as many of you have said.
In particular, the European Union shall adopt measures setting out the highest standards for the quality and safety of organs and substances of human origin, blood and blood derivatives.
Several molecular signatures associated to lung function decline and corollaries of disease severity have been proposed, a majority of which are characterized in easily accessible surrogate tissue, including blood derivatives such as serum and plasma.
It also organises testing of a number of biological products (blood derivatives and vaccines) with elaboration by and for OMCLs of European test procedures for batch release of such products.
Consequently, the agency regulates blood, blood derivatives and other biological products through its Center for Biologics, while heart valves, nerve tissue and corneal tissue for eye surgery are under its Center for Devices and Radiological Health.
Hydrolized proteins, used as binders, extenders or flavor enhancers, are derived from plants, yeast, dairy, egg or fish as well as from collagen, bone or blood derivatives, said Dr. Michael W. Pariza, director of the Food Research Institute at the University of Wisconsin.
From this point of view, the directive of 14 June 1989 on blood derivatives was a dangerous one, in that it opened the way for the application of market laws to substances of human origin, with the resulting payments for blood donation and the growing penetration of the blood derivatives market by private companies.