Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Zika Threat Prompts 21-Day Ban On Blood Donations For Some Canadian Travellers

The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2016 11:57 AM
    TORONTO — The agency responsible for most of Canada's blood supply says people who have travelled outside of Canada, the continental United States and Europe will be ineligible to give blood for 21 days after their return.
     
    Canadian Blood Services says it is implementing the waiting period to mitigate the risk of the Zika virus entering the Canadian blood supply.
     
    In a release Wednesday, Canadian Blood Services says the new waiting period is being implemented across the country and will take full effect in all of its clinics starting on Feb. 5.
     
    Quebec's blood operator, Hema-Quebec, will be implementing the same change as of this Sunday.
     
    Canadian Blood Services says the 21-day period ensures enough time has passed for the virus to be eliminated from a person's bloodstream, but it is asking people to postpone blood donation for at least a month after returning from travel outside the specified zones.
     
    The three-week waiting period also applies to cord blood and stem cell donors who have travelled to affected areas. The waiting period begins the day a person returns to Canada.
     
    Canadian Blood Services says the risk of a Canadian donor transmitting the Zika virus to a blood recipient is very low, adding that the mosquito that carries the virus does not live in Canada due to the colder climate.
     
     
    There have been very few reported cases of Zika virus infection in Canadians who travelled abroad.
     
    "This new temporary deferral period will safeguard Canada's blood supply against the Zika virus, and will also help us protect against other similar mosquito-borne viruses," Dr. Dana Devine, chief medical and scientific officer for Canadian Blood Services, said in a statement. 
     
    Canadian Blood Services said it anticipates the ineligibility period will reduce the number of donors available to donate in the coming months and is urging Canadians to donate before they travel to help make up for the anticipated shortfall.
     
    Canadian Blood Services manages the national supply of blood, blood products and stem cells, and related services for all the provinces and territories — excluding Quebec.
     
    US ZIKA CASE SPARKS QUESTIONS ABOUT SEX AND MOSQUITO GERMS
     
    NEW YORK — A sexually transmitted case of Zika in Texas has scientists scrambling to understand how much of a risk infection through sex is for the usually mosquito-spread illness.
     
    Experts still stress that mosquitoes are the main culprit in the Zika epidemic menacing Latin America and looming over the United States.
     
     
    "Mosquitoes would be the great river of transmission, while sexual transmission is going to be akin to a mountain stream," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University.
     
    But the Texas case has spurred more discussion about additional ways in which Zika and other illnesses, commonly thought to be carried only by mosquitoes, might be spread.
     
    Other types of transmission can be hard to spot in the midst of outbreaks in which many mosquito-borne infections are occurring, noted Dr. Ali Khan, a former disease investigator for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
    "It's very hard to parse this out in the middle of an epidemic," said Khan, now dean of the University of Nebraska's college of public health.
     
    Discerning something like sexual transmission would have to occur in a place where an outbreak was not raging, he said.
     
    That's what happened in Dallas.
     
    The current Zika epidemic is on track to cause millions of infections in Latin America and the Caribbean, but no transmission was reported in the United States until the Dallas case this week.
     
    Health officials said a person there — who had not travelled to an outbreak area — was infected. An investigation concluded the person caught the virus through sex with a person who had recently returned from Venezuela, where Zika infections have been growing.
     
    Officials released few details about the case, except to say both patients have recovered. But it wasn't the first to raise the possibility of sexual transmission of the virus.
     
     
    A Colorado State University researcher, Brian Foy, picked up the virus in Africa and apparently spread it to his wife back home in 2008. More recently, it was found in one man's semen in Tahiti.
     
    Now, in the wake of the Dallas case, "we're all kind of scrambling in the scientific community how best to tackle this and how best to research it," said Foy.
     
    Most people infected with Zika experience, at the most, only mild symptoms. But mounting evidence in Brazil has suggested a connection between the virus and babies born with brain defects and abnormally small heads.
     
    The Zika epidemic and possible link to microcephaly cases in Brazil prompted the World Health Organization to declare a global emergency on Monday, calling the virus' rapid spread and its apparent link to the birth defect an "extraordinary event" that poses a threat to the rest of the world.
     
    WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said Wednesday that the Texas sexual transmission case is "obviously a concern."
     
    "We need to know more about how likely this is to happen. We also have to understand whether there are other human-to-human transmission routes, such as blood transfusion, such as mother-to-child transmission," he said.
     
    Perhaps a bigger worry than sex is what dangers may lurk in blood donations from people who have been in Zika outbreak areas, said Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, a Columbia University infectious diseases researcher.
     
    "I would raise caution that any blood used in pregnant women should be tested for the presence of Zika virus," something that currently doesn't happen, Lipkin said.
     
     
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says there are no approved tests for routine screening of blood donations for Zika virus, but it is looking into the issue. Zika virus usually remains in the blood of an infected person for a few days but it can be found longer in some people, the CDC says. This week, the Red Cross said they are asking travellers to Zika outbreak countries to wait at least 28 days before donating blood.
     
    On Wednesday, Canadian health officials announced that people who have travelled outside of Canada, the continental United States and Europe will be ineligible to give blood for 21 days after their return. Canadian Blood Services says it is implementing the waiting period to mitigate the risk of the Zika virus entering the Canadian blood supply.
     
    Meanwhile, the CDC said it will issue guidance in the coming days on prevention of sexual transmission of the Zika virus, focusing on the male sexual partners of women who are or may be pregnant.
     
    It's a tall order, because so much is unknown about sexual transmission and Zika, experts said.
     
    How long is someone infectious? How long does the virus live in the sperm? Does it only spread if the first person is suffering symptoms?
     
    Foy said that in his case, he didn't begin to experience symptoms until after he and his wife had sex.
     
    "It's completely black box right now" in terms of how little is known about the risk of sexual transmission, Foy said.
     
    As worrisome as possible sexual transmission may be, experts stress that mosquitoes will continue to be the far greater concern. The bugs inject virus right into the blood stream — an extremely efficient way of spreading dangerous germs through the body.
     
     
    "The mosquito is the deadliest animal on the planet," Schaffner said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Advanced 3D facial imaging may detect autism early

    Advanced 3D facial imaging may detect autism early
    Using advanced 3D facial imaging techniques, researchers at University of Missouri have identified facial measurements in children with autism...

    Advanced 3D facial imaging may detect autism early

    DNA 'glue' can help grow tissues, organs

    DNA 'glue' can help grow tissues, organs
    DNA molecules can act as a glue to hold together 3D-printed materials that could be used to grow tissues and organs in the lab, researchers report....

    DNA 'glue' can help grow tissues, organs

    Blocking hormone can fix stress-induced infertility

    Blocking hormone can fix stress-induced infertility
    Chronic stress activates a hormone that reduces fertility long after the stress has ended, but blocking this hormone returns female reproductive...

    Blocking hormone can fix stress-induced infertility

    Inherited viruses make us smarter

    Inherited viruses make us smarter
    Long thought to be "junk DNA" of no real use, millions of years old inherited viruses actually play an important role in making the human brain dynamic and...

    Inherited viruses make us smarter

    Virtual game can detect mild cognitive impairment

    Virtual game can detect mild cognitive impairment
    A team of Greek researchers has shown the potential of a virtual reality brain training game as a screening tool for patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)....

    Virtual game can detect mild cognitive impairment

    Nasal insulin spray may treat Alzheimer's disease

    Nasal insulin spray may treat Alzheimer's disease
    Nasal spray of a man-made form of insulin, a hormone that regulates the amount of glucose in the blood, may improve working memory in adults with mild...

    Nasal insulin spray may treat Alzheimer's disease