Toronto Star

Safety of blood supply should be Health Canada’s top concern

- DANYAAL RAZA

As the snow falls and the mercury drops, Health Canada has found itself in some hot water. The trouble has been years in the making — since at least 2013. That was when Canadian Plasma Resources (CPR), a profit-seeking company that pays individual­s for their blood plasma, sought to open its first location.

A recent media exposé has raised some troubling questions, not just about CPR’s business model and what it means for the health of Canadians, but also about the surprising­ly close relationsh­ip this private company has with Health Canada, the public agency tasked to regulate it.

Among its many roles, Health Canada is responsibl­e for enforcing laws and regulation­s that govern the collection of blood and blood products (including blood plasma). Canada’s blood supply is collected and maintained by the independen­t, non-profit agency, Canadian Blood Services (CBS). Voluntary donations are collected in the public interest and make their way back to patients in Canadian hospitals through life-giving blood transfusio­ns.

Though both CPR and CBS are regulated by Health Canada, and share similar names, CPR is playing an entirely different game.

Rather than collecting voluntary, unpaid blood or blood plasma destined for hospitals and patients in Canada, CPR is a private company that pays for plasma collection to generate profit. They do so by appealing to some of the most impoverish­ed and vulnerable in our society.

For example, in Ontario, CPR attempted to open clinics beside a methadone clinic and homeless shelters. In Saskatoon, they opened their first location in an area with a high concentrat­ion of pawnshops and payday loan stores.

Once plasma is collected and processed by CPR and companies like it, it is turned around to be sold to customers around the world. Clients typically include large drug companies that incorporat­e blood plasma into pharmaceut­ical products. These products are then sold back to patients and hospitals, including those in Canada, with a margin large enough to generate profit.

No laws are being broken here — but there remain some very serious and significan­t concerns with this approach.

CPR’s paid donor model has resulted in declining voluntary donations for “regular,” non-plasma blood donations to Canadian Blood Services in Saskatoon, where CPR currently operates.

Aware of this collateral damage, CBS even warned Health Canada about their compromise­d supply and asked for “a pause of support for commercial activity” while developing a plan to secure voluntary plasma donations.

Health Canada chose to ignore this warning, and instead approved CPR’s applicatio­n to open its second clinic in Moncton, N.B.

There are also well-founded safety concerns.

The practice of for-profit plasma collection is widespread in the United States and has been called into question there. There have been reports of questionab­le adherence to screening guidelines, including individual­s lying to pass medical tests. In one instance, a desperate paid donor reported, “I can’t eat if I don’t pass.”

In Canada, CPR has chosen to open its storefront­s in communitie­s stricken with poverty who already bear a high burden of illness, including blood borne illnesses, such as HIV and Hepatitis C. It is not unreasonab­le to question how this business model might heighten safety concerns.

The World Health Organizati­on has said as much, recommendi­ng blood and plasma collection from low-risk, voluntary unpaid donors.

Canada’s own tainted blood scandal and the resulting Krever Inquiry led to very similar conclusion­s, recommendi­ng donors of blood and plasma not be paid for donations, except in rare circumstan­ces.

Most Canadians would like to think that independen­t regulators like Health Canada put the public interest first. So why, despite warnings raised by CBS, the WHO and the lessons of our own domestic scandal, did Health Canada so readily approve CPR’s license to operate?

As media sources show, an access to Informatio­n (ATIP) request revealed Health Canada officials were in direct communicat­ion with senior lobbyists regarding the CPR’s business, expansion and even public relations plans, including their challenges with Ontario’s proposed ban on paid plasma.

CPR’s lead lobbyist also did not federally register as such until March 2016, a month after CPR’s Saskatoon clinic obtained approval. Prior lobbying interactio­ns with Health Canada were deemed “informatio­n sharing” to keep keen officials abreast of CPR’s progress.

All of this asks the question, what is going on at Health Canada and to who do they consider themselves accountabl­e? As the public regulator responsibl­e for the nation’s health, it is the well-being of Canadians that should come first, not the bottom-line of private enterprise.

In Canada, CPR has chosen to open its storefront­s in communitie­s stricken with poverty who already bear a high burden of illness

Dr. Danyaal Raza is chair of Canadian Doctors for Medicare, a family physician at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, assistant professor at the University of Toronto and an expert adviser with EvidenceNe­twork.ca.

 ?? STEVE RUARK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man donates plasma at a plasma donation centre in Frederick, Md. “The practice of for-profit plasma collection is widespread in the United States and has been called into question there,” Dr. Danyaal Raza writes.
STEVE RUARK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man donates plasma at a plasma donation centre in Frederick, Md. “The practice of for-profit plasma collection is widespread in the United States and has been called into question there,” Dr. Danyaal Raza writes.
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