Health Coalitions denounce for-profit deal by
Canadian Blood Services that endangers Canada’s
Blood Supply
Canada’s provincial and territorial Health Coalitions and the Canadian Health Coalition
call for the resignation of the leadership of the Canadian Blood Services (CBS) including
the CEO and Board of Directors. This call comes after the appalling decision by CBS to
sign a 15-year agreement with a for-profit international pharmaceutical firm to collect
plasma.
Instead of investing in expanding successful publicly operated voluntary plasma
collection, CBS has signed an agreement that ensures private profits while risking the
sustainability of Canada’s blood and plasma supply. The agreement hands over the
collection of plasma to private for-profit company Grifols, which will pay donors for
plasma, something that experts and public interest advocates have strongly opposed. In
fact, Grifols has a history of going into Mexico loading up buses of people taking them
across into the US harvesting the plasma and taking them back into Mexico the same
day.
This deal endangers the sustainability of Canada’s blood supply by opening up a
precious and medically crucial public asset to profit-making. Instead of blood being a
universal and free public resource, this deal opens up the doors to private, for-profit
corporations moving into the blood collection system. This would harm the voluntary
donation system that Canadians currently rely on.
Importantly, this undemocratic deal circumvents legislated provincial bans on private
payment for plasma in Ontario and BC. CBS has undermined existing legislation and
the citizens of Ontario and BC to make a unilateral decision about Canada’s plasma
supply. This is an undemocratic violation of the trust that the public placed in CBS to
protect the public blood and plasma collection system.
The Krever commission/Royal Commission of Inquiry on the Blood System in Canada,
which led to the creation of the CBS itself, noted that blood should be a public resource
and no one should be paid to donate blood or plasma. In provinces where private
payment for plasma occurs, voluntary donations have been negatively impacted.