I seem to recall a technology that was able to fractionate good blood from bad blood? IIRC it was able to do so b/c less healthy blood held more iron or something and was heavier. It was thought that doing this on a regular basis would be good for us and for our longevity. So why not partner with "The Blood Bank" to propagate this technology to make blood donation more attractive? We'd need to study this and make sure that there was a net benefit first. Right now, blood donation ages us and depletes, albeit slowly, our replicative capacity. It's not noticeable, but it could benefit the donor and ensure that there is always enough blood. Now would be the right time to do this and make this technology widely available. There will be demand for it until we start cloning blood that is as good or better than the rest.
Having this technology will also improve the quality of blood given to patients.