EU seeks to upgrade safety rules for blood, tissue, cell donations
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[July 14, 2022]
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European
Commission proposed on Thursday updated rules on blood, tissue and cells
to provide greater protection to donors and recipients and to increase
access to innovative transfusion and transplant therapies.
The EU executive aims to extend 20-year-old rules to include babies born
from medically assisted reproduction and donors, including the 15
million who give blood, as well as over 34,000 stem cell donors and more
than 39,000 egg donors every year.
Screening should protect the 165,000 children born per year from donated
eggs, sperm or embryos against genetic disorders.
The updated rules would seek to protect donors from exploitation and
risks to their own health and require improved follow-up and reporting
of adverse effects of donating.
They would also extend monitoring to other substances of human origin,
such as breast milk and faecal microbiota that can be transplanted into
a patient to improve their digestive systems.
The proposal, to cover substances of human origin except organs, would
seek to harmonise rules across the 27-nation European Union to ease
cross-border exchanges, improving patient access to therapeutics and
allowing more innovation.
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A woman squeezes a ball to keep blood flowing while donating blood
on the stage of the closed MAD (Moulin a Danse) night club during
the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Lausanne,
Switzerland, December 7, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Each year, 4.6 million people in the
EU receive blood transfusions, 36,000 get stem cell transplants and
2,000 require skin transplants for burns and other injuries.
The proposal also seeks to ensure the bloc is more
self-sufficient, with access to life-saving treatments even during a
crisis. Currently, the EU imports up to a third of the blood plasma
it requires, mostly from the United States.
Unlike the United States, the EU remains committed to voluntary and
unpaid donation, which it sees as protecting donors from
exploitation.
The new rules, which the European Parliament and EU governments will
need to approve, will serve as an EU-wide guide, but individual EU
countries will be free to have more stringent rules.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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