Another medical contact has come up with more information. At schools, in churches, malls, blood banks or wherever else voluntary blood is donated there is another possible patient. He /she has Primary Polycynthemia.
Primary polycythemia, often called polycythemia vera (PCV), polycythemia rubra vera (PRV), or erythremia, occurs when excess red blood cells are produced as a result of an abnormality of the bone marrow. Often, excess white blood cells and platelets are also produced. Polycythemia vera is classified as a myeloproliferative disease.
This person can schedule a phlebotomy at the same time everyone else is donating. A mobile unit could be used to reach someone who for whatever reason can't get in to a Blood Bank main building. If phlebotomist are in the outskirts of an area it may be more convenient to schedule a draw at the local church then have the patient drive in to town. It's just labeled different then disposed of. These people are patients under doctors care.
The only problem is the NEC definition of a PCA does state that it is a portion of a health care facility.
Because of the definition I now think an area is a PCA if it is a permanent blood donation location and if at a church or mall, then no, even though patients are treated.
A blood bank is a health care facility because of the patients it treats. (donors are just tolerated while the real work gets done :roll: )