“This request was made to ensure that sufficient safety data could be collected prior to considering further changes to the deferral policy,” said Health Canada spokesperson Andre Gagnon in a statement. In its own “Statement of Particulars” in the case, Health Canada stated that after the 2013 change the agency imposed the requirement for two years of post-implementation monitoring “before it could consider further changes” to the policy.įurther, Health Canada confirmed that it asked CBS to do two years of monitoring for the rate of HIV and other transmissible pathogens in donors prior to filing further submissions for changing the deferral policy.
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In reference to the 2013 change that saw the then-lifetime ban knocked down to a five-year deferral period, CBS said in its submission that following that update, Health Canada “required a minimum of two years of post-implementation monitoring before it would consider further changes” to the blood donation policy. However, Health Canada denies that minimum monitoring periods were a condition of its authorizations, telling CTVNews.ca in an email days after the story was initially published, that the two-year wait between when the donor screening criteria could be updated was only asked for in the 2013 instance, and not as part of subsequent submissions, despite what the documents indicate.
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This request from the federal health agency-which regulates Canada’s blood donor agencies Canadian Blood Services (CBS) and Hema-Quebec-was made in order to monitor potential blood safety impacts of the updated donor screening criteria. Amid ongoing questions about why the policy that prohibits sexually active gay men as well as some other folks in the LGBTQ2S+ community from donating blood has been slow to evolve, documents indicate that Health Canada “required” two-year intervals between when the donor screening criteria could be updated.