Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Saskatchewan Nurses Latest To Oppose Pay-for-plasma Donation Clinic

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2016 12:49 PM
    REGINA — Nurses are the latest group to join opposition to a private, for-profit plasma donor clinic in Saskatchewan.
     
    Tracy Zambory, president of the Saskatchewan Union of Nurses, has written a letter to federal Health Minister Jane Philpott that says nurses believe the clinic poses a serious safety risk to the blood supply.
     
    Canadian Plasma Resources opened its doors Feb. 18 and plans to pay people with $25 gift cards for making plasma donations.
     
    The centre will be inspected by Health Canada and has to comply with national regulations, including donor screening and testing.
     
    Zambory asks Philpott to immediately prevent Health Canada from issuing licenses to any clinic intending to pay donors for blood or plasma.
     
    Zambory also points to an inquiry into the tainted blood scandal of the 1980s which recommended against paid-donor blood clinics.
     
    "SUN is deeply concerned that any company paying donors for plasma would be operating in direct contravention of these recommendations and would once again be placing Canadians in great peril," Zambory said in letter Tuesday.
     
    The Canadian Union of Public Employees and the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour have also called for a ban on such clinics.
     
    Philpott has fended off calls to close the clinic in Saskatchewan by saying Canada has one of the safest blood systems in the world. She said in the House of Commons on Feb. 18 that the government has "examined this in great detail" and is "approaching this matter looking at the science and making sure that there are no compromises to the safety of the blood system."
     
    Saskatchewan Health Minister Dustin Duncan supports the clinic and has noted that 80 per cent of plasma used in Canada currently comes from paid donors, largely in the United States, but also in Europe.
     
    Plasma is the straw-coloured liquid portion of blood.
     
    Canadian Plasma Resources says donating typically takes one hour. It says plasma collected will be used in other medical therapies, not for direct transfusions.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Lead exposure can make you fat

    Lead exposure can make you fat
    Even at low levels, lead is associated with obesity in mice whose mothers were exposed to the chemical, researchers at University of Michigan have found....

    Lead exposure can make you fat

    Office with windows boosts health of workers

    Office with windows boosts health of workers
    The windows in your office may open gateways to good health as researchers have found that daylight in office improves worker's sleep, physical activity and quality of life....

    Office with windows boosts health of workers

    How brain tumours evade body's defences

    How brain tumours evade body's defences
    Brain tumours evade detection by the body's defence forces by coating their cells with extra amounts of galectin-1 protein, says a study....

    How brain tumours evade body's defences

    New technique can reduce high BP without drugs

    New technique can reduce high BP without drugs
    A new technique called mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) can help people suffering from hypertension...

    New technique can reduce high BP without drugs

    Hand-held device can detect deadly skin cancer

    Hand-held device can detect deadly skin cancer
    A new hand-held device that uses lasers and sound waves may change the way doctors treat and diagnose the deadly skin cancer melanoma, says new research....

    Hand-held device can detect deadly skin cancer

    Human milk crucial for critically ill infants

    Human milk crucial for critically ill infants
    Human milk is infant food but for critically ill babies, it can also work as a medicine, says a promising research....

    Human milk crucial for critically ill infants