Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Blood Services Increases Iron Guidelines For Donors

Darpan News Desk, 25 Oct, 2016 12:59 PM
    OTTAWA — Tougher iron guidelines for blood donors will almost certainly reduce collections in the short term, said a spokesman for Canadian Blood Services as the national agency appealed for more donations.
     
    Stricter rules will force female donors to wait longer between donations and male donors will have to pass a stricter hemoglobin test.
     
    It's all meant to promote health and wellness among donors, but the director of donor relations for Ontario said it will also reduce the amount of blood they can collect from regular patrons.
     
    "They're very significant. It will seriously impact our collections," Michael Betel said Tuesday of the changes.
     
    "As you can imagine, there are a lot of female donors and so it's something that we took the time to be able to implement."
     
    Starting Dec. 10, female donors will need to wait 12 weeks between blood donations instead of the current eight-week period.
     
     
    And starting March 5, 2017, male donors must have a minimum hemoglobin level of 130 grams per litre, up from 125 grams per litre.
     
    Betel said Canadian Blood Services will need about 100,000 new donors to make up for the potential shortfall.
     
    "The key here is we really need to get new donors. We're still at a place where only one in 60 Canadians donate blood — and one in two are eligible."
     
    Betel said the agency has about 400,000 regular donors, with the average donor visiting twice a year. But the service also loses about 175,000 donors a year.
     
    Hemoglobin is a protein found in red blood cells that is necessary for carrying oxygen to the tissues in the body.
     
    Iron is an essential element for producing hemoglobin, but it is also found in other parts of the body. The blood services agency said it's possible to have normal hemoglobin levels but to have low iron.
     
    Betel, who said the changes are based on studies conducted in 2009 and 2014, encouraged new donors to come in with a friend.
     
    "Year-to-date we're on target but the last month or so has been softer."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Smoked Meat And Basketball: Trudeau Takes Lighter Approach To Connect With China

    Smoked Meat And Basketball: Trudeau Takes Lighter Approach To Connect With China
    SHANGHAI — With the higher-stakes political discussions behind him, Justin Trudeau's week-long mission to foster Canadian-Chinese relations adopted a lighter tone Friday.

    Smoked Meat And Basketball: Trudeau Takes Lighter Approach To Connect With China

    Frightened Pooch Plucked From Side Of Rocky Cliff In Daring Rescue

    Frightened Pooch Plucked From Side Of Rocky Cliff In Daring Rescue
    PARADISE, N.L. — A lucky, but tired dog is back with his family after rescuers plucked him from the side of a sheer cliff where he had been stranded for days.

    Frightened Pooch Plucked From Side Of Rocky Cliff In Daring Rescue

    Frustrated Vandal Silences Noisy Piano In New Brunswick Town's Square

    Frustrated Vandal Silences Noisy Piano In New Brunswick Town's Square
    SUSSEX, N.B. — A New Brunswick man unhappy with a noisy outdoor piano in his local town square took matters into his own hands this week: He screwed the key cover shut.

    Frustrated Vandal Silences Noisy Piano In New Brunswick Town's Square

    Police In B.C. City Believe Fentanyl Involved In 9 Overdoses Within 20 Minutes

    DELTA, B.C. — It's a miracle that no one died after nine people overdosed within a 20-minute period on what are believed to be drugs laced with fentanyl, a police chief in British Columbia says.

    Police In B.C. City Believe Fentanyl Involved In 9 Overdoses Within 20 Minutes

    Final Arguments Delayed In Trial For Woman Charged With Hiding Infant Remains

    Final Arguments Delayed In Trial For Woman Charged With Hiding Infant Remains
    WINNIPEG — Closing arguments in the trial of a Winnipeg woman charged with hiding the remains of six infants in a storage locker have been delayed.

    Final Arguments Delayed In Trial For Woman Charged With Hiding Infant Remains

    3 Surrey High School Teachers Temporarily Suspended Over 'Jar Of Death' Punishments

    3 Surrey High School Teachers Temporarily Suspended Over 'Jar Of Death' Punishments
    Campers were pressured to lick a teacher's foot, chew gum that had been chewed by another teacher and drink a glass of water into which four people had spat

    3 Surrey High School Teachers Temporarily Suspended Over 'Jar Of Death' Punishments