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Blood-donor deferral period for men who have sex with men cut to three months

bag of blood, clinic,
A bag of blood is shown at a clinic on Thursday, November 29, 2012 in Montreal. File photo by The Canadian Press/Ryan Remiorz

Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor says men who have sex with men will be able to give blood after a deferral period of three months, down from a year.

Petitpas Taylor says the decision was made at the request of Canadian Blood Services and Hema-Quebec, adding it is a significant step towards eliminating the deferral period all together.

Until 2013, Canada had a lifetime ban preventing men who had had sex with men from donating, meaning they could not give blood if they had sexual relationships after 1977.

Health Canada has approved three requests to reduce the deferral periods, which are meant to reduce the risk of transmitting HIV.

It was brought down to five years in 2013, then to one year in 2016 and it will now be three months.

Liberal MP Randy Boissonnault, the special adviser to the prime minister on LGBTQ2 issues, called the reduced deferral period a "big win," adding the government has spent $3.5 million on scientific research to justify the reduction.

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