The role of other people and emotion for blood donation : an altruistic social service


Autoria(s): Russell-Bennett, Rebekah; Russell, Kay; Glavas, Charmaine; Hartel, Charmine E.J.; Smith, Geoff
Data(s)

15/06/2014

Resumo

Blood donation is a critical part of health services with a viable blood supply underpinning an effective health program in any country. Typically blood is provided by voluntary donations from citizens and is therefore reliant on the goodwill and altruistic commitment of donors. In Australia, like many other developed nations, there are many challenges in maintaining a sufficient and sustainable blood supply. The Australian Red Cross Blood Service Donor and Community research group aim is to understand the barriers, motivations and perceptions of donors. Blood donation is a ‘people-processing’ service (Lovelock 1983, Russell-Bennett et al 2013) with the marketing exchange relating to bodily fluid rather than money and is an altruistic social service that has no direct benefit for the customer donor rather the benefit is for other people and society (Kotler and Zaltman 1971). Emotion has been shown to be a motivator and a barrier in a variety of Blood Service studies, this is a key insight that is further explored in the current study. Other key social factors that impact blood donor behavior are classified as social because they involve perceptions of other people’s beliefs and responses (such as moral or subjective norms), peer pressure, other people’s expectations and other people as a form of support. Given that emotions are social phenomena (Parkinson 1996), this study focuses on the role of other people in the blood donation process and how other people relates to the emotional experience of blood donors. We argue in this paper that overcoming emotional barriers to blood donation by leveraging the role of other people will influence low donation rates in Australia. To date, there has been little evidence in service research that identifies. In this paper we explore how other people influence the emotional experience of donors and how, donor emotions create the need for other people as a coping resource.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78669/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78669/2/78669.pdf

Russell-Bennett, Rebekah, Russell, Kay, Glavas, Charmaine, Hartel, Charmine E.J., & Smith, Geoff (2014) The role of other people and emotion for blood donation : an altruistic social service. In 2014 American Marketing Association Services Special Interest Group (AMA Servsig), 13-15 June 2014, Thessaloniki, Greece.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 [please consult the author]

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Advertising, Marketing & Public Relations

Palavras-Chave #social marketing #blood donation #emotion #altruistic service #health
Tipo

Conference Paper