A bag of blood is shown at a clinic in Montreal, Thursday, November 29, 2012. Quebec's blood supply agency says Health Canada has lifted a longstanding ban on blood donations in the province that stemmed from fear of mad cow disease. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz
Health Canada is lifting a ban on blood donations from people who lived or travelled in the United Kingdom, Ireland or France for long periods of time in the 1980s and 1990s.
The decades-long rule was a precaution to prevent the transmission of mad cow disease through blood transfusions from people who had a higher likelihood of being exposed.
Canadian Blood Services says almost 30 years of research and surveillance has made it clear that people who weren’t eligible to donate under the travel criteria can do so safely.
The agency’s medical officer, Dr. Aditi Khandelwal, says lifting the ban will not impact the safety of the blood supply and will allow thousands more people to donate much-needed blood.
The news comes hours after Health Canada authorized Héma-Québec – which manages the blood supply in Quebec – to remove the same ban.
The change takes effect across Canada on Dec. 4.
The United States and Australia each lifted similar bans in 2022.
Both Canadian Blood Services and Héma-Québec said they have turned away thousands of potential blood donors whose travel in the United Kingdom and Europe decades ago disqualified them.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 22, 2023.
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