. . . and that puts an N into the Buchan character so it rather looks as if it IS going to be Hannay after all. (Does the compiler make a habit of making errors like M M in the Telegraph?)
15a The p comes from lepidopterous (relating to moths and butterflys).
The e comes from hypermetropia (longsightedness)
The o comes from flesh wound (superficial injury)
The s comes from snow leopard (ano name for ounce)
The FT Polymath rarely has errors unlike the MM ones but does look as if there may be one now.
I have found 2 words that fits your letters but unfortunately have nothing to do with blood cells:
spheroplast n. A bacterial cell whose cell wall is absent or deficient, causing it to have a spherical form.
spherodise also fits the letters but has nothing to do with any type of cell. eg Spheroidise annealing (spheroidising): An annealing process that changes the geometric shape of cemented carbides.
15a I have gone with Hannah as the compiler must have confused actors Robert Donat, Robert Powell who played Richard Hannah in the film versions
7d Orcinol is defined as a dihydric phenol from lichens(latest Chambers dictionary)
I think the blood cell solution is probably like the silly Irish name for Heron Bay a few weeks back - solution printed not found on the web with the exact spelling. There are two medical terms that fit spheroPlast and spheroBlast
The spheroplast is the one I will go for as it be a type of one of the real types posted above.