BloodWatch urges Victor Boudreau to oppose paid donations - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:09 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

BloodWatch urges Victor Boudreau to oppose paid donations

A petition against paid blood plasma gathering services was presented to New Brunswick Health Minister Victor Boudreau Thursday by the lobby group BloodWatch on Thursday.

Blood Watch is on a mission to deliver a 15,000-signature petition to country's health ministers

Petition against paid blood donations delivered

8 years ago
Duration 4:48
A petition opposing the set up of a paid blood donation clinic in N.B. was delivered to health minister Victor Boudreau Thursday.

A petition against paid blood plasma gathering services was presented to New Brunswick Health Minister Victor Boudreau Thursday by the lobby group BloodWatch on Thursday.

More than100 letters from registered nurses opposing any payment for blood plasma was also given to Boudreau.

"The reality is that private blood brokers actually take away life-saving treatments that should be going to Canadians and New Brunswickers because all of that blood plasma would be geared for export," said Kat Lanteigne, executive director of Blood Watch.

Lanteigne said 15,000 signatures were gathered from across the country on the online petition. She said they want to present the petition to all the health ministers not yet committed to banning paid for plasma services. Ontario and Quebec have already imposed such bans.

New Brunswick Health Minister Victor Boudreau (right) and Kat Lanteigne (left),executive director of Canadian blood donation watch dog Blood Watch, disagree on paid plasma donations. (CBC)
However, Boudreau wasn't convinced.

"As Canadians, approximately 70 per cent of the plasma we use comes from paid donors. Now they're not paid Canadian donors, but they're paid donors just the same," said Boudreau, referring to plasma donations collected in the United States.

He said in a meeting with the health ministers from across the country, the Canadian Blood Service said it was prepared to meet 50 per cent of the country's needs. And that would mean a 50 per cent gap.

Why is it okay to have paid donors from the U.S. and not from Canada?- Victor Boudreau, health minister

Lanteigne wasn't buying that argument and stressed an importance for Canadians to become self-sufficient in blood needs.

"And so all of that plasma that would be [gathered] in New Brunswick would be for export, to be sold around the world to the highest bidder. That actually does nothing to help Canadians become self-sufficient," said Lanteigne.

She also raised health concerns about paid for plasma donors. But Boudreau said there hasn't been an incident since Krever report, a report following a massive blood contamination scandal in Canada in the 1980s.

"Why is it okay to have paid donors from the U.S. and not from Canada?" said Boudreau.