Knowledge synthesis forum highlights dedication of research teams and stakeholders, commitment of Canadian blood operators

With funding from Health Canada, Canadian Blood Services and Héma-Québec are supporting research to contribute to the establishment of adequate evidence-based research for alternative screening approaches for blood or plasma donors, which could evolve the current deferral policy for men who have sex with men (MSM) while maintaining the safety of the blood supply. The MSM Research Program funds 15 innovative research projects to generate evidence that is currently lacking. The Canadian research efforts will contribute to a growing national and international body of knowledge on the topic, as
July 31, 2020

Organ donation after circulatory death (DCD) e-learning module now available

Third module of Canadian Clinical Guide to Organ Donation just launched The Canadian Clinical Guide to Organ Donation is an essential curriculum for health professionals that enhances competencies in the identification and care of potential deceased donors and their families. It is a free self-directed, interactive, online e-learning course. Developed by Canadian Blood Services in collaboration with the organ donation organizations in Canada and many generous volunteers from the Canadian Critical Care community, this curriculum is accredited Royal College of Physicians & Surgeons of Canada and
July 21, 2020

Cord Blood Awareness Month: Q&A with researcher Jennie Haw

Dr. Jennie Haw is a scientist at Canadian Blood Services’ Centre for Innovation. She was a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Health System Impact postdoctoral fellow from 2017—2019. Her research project during this fellowship focused on optimizing cord blood donor recruitment for the national public cord blood bank. As a sociologist, she’s interested in understanding how health and health systems relate to the individual and society. As we celebrate Cord Blood Awareness Month this July, we sat down with Dr. Haw to talk about her research and its impact on cord blood banking. What’s
July 16, 2020

COVID-19 resources for health-care professionals

As the world grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic, being well informed has perhaps never been more important. For health-care professionals in particular, keeping pace with information related to COVID-19, which can change rapidly, is critical in helping them best serve their patients. To support Canadian transfusion medicine health-care professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve created a repository of information on the Canadian Blood Services’ professional education website. You’ll find resources on blood product conservation practices during COVID-19, information about the treatment
June 25, 2020

Call for applications! Research funding to optimize blood product use and to train next-generation researchers

Two funding programs that support making the most out of blood donations are now welcoming applications. The Blood Efficiency Accelerator Program or “BEAP” is a highly innovative research funding program geared towards optimizing blood product use while maintaining the safety of the blood supply. The Postdoctoral Fellowship Program or “PDF” is a vital training program that contributes to building a community of experts that will ensure the relevance and safety of the blood system and transplantation system for now and the years to come. Every year, the Centre for Innovation welcomes
June 19, 2020
The BRIC study is focused on burnout and resiliency in organ donor coordinators. Through this study we are taking a systematic approach to understand and intervene in the issue of burnout among donor coordinators in Canada. The BRiC study is a three-phase research project focused on systematically investigating ways to minimize the impact of compassion fatigue, burnout, and moral distress, and to identify ways to increase resilience among healthcare workers who support organ and tissue donors and their families at end-of-life and through organ donation.

Canadian Blood Services scientist Alan Lazarus honoured by the Canadian transfusion community

Like many in the Canadian transfusion medicine community, Dr. Alan Lazarus should be travelling to Montreal, QC this week to attend the now cancelled Canadian Society for Transfusion Medicine 2020 conference. Not being able to gather together with colleagues this year must be especially bittersweet for Dr. Lazarus, who is the recipient of the 2020 Ortho Award. This prestigious award recognizes an individual who has provided a major service or innovation in transfusion medicine. Dr. Lazarus is a senior scientist at Canadian Blood Services, and a professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the
May 26, 2020
This national organ donation and transplantation COVID-19 impact dashboard was developed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and is intended to help the community better understand, in near real time, the impact the COVID-19 crisis has had, either directly or indirectly on organ donation and transplantation practices in Canada and by extension, what impact these changes have had on potential donors and transplant candidates. Reporting of Covid-19 case data was discontinued May 2023.
Health care professionals in donation and transplantation are invited to attend a series of webinars focusing on psychological first aid, grief and loss, and moral distress, within the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. A severe mass event like this pandemic can cause the general public and those affected by COVID-19, including health care workers, to be mentally impacted. Psychological First Aid is an intervention method that can help people in distress during these challenging times. The webinars will be recorded, in case you cannot attend the live events or you experience technical issues. For questions, please contact otdt@blood.ca Part 1: Psychological First Aid during COVID-19 | May 12, 2020 | 4 p.m. – 5 p.m. (ET) Handout Part 2: Grief and Loss during COVID-19 May 19, 2020 | 4 p.m. – 5 p.m. (ET) Handout Part 3: Moral Distress during COVID-19 June 2, 2020 | 4 p.m. – 5 p.m. (ET) Handout 1 Handout 2 Handout 3 Presenters Dr. David Kuhl Dr. David Kuhl is a Professor in the Departments of Family Practice and Urologic Sciences, Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Kuhl graduated with a Masters in Health Sciences (Community Health and Epidemiology) from the University of Toronto in 1981, and received his medical degree from McMaster University in 1985. After completing his training in Family Practice (1987) he worked as a family practitioner and a palliative care physician. In that context he conducted a qualitative study, Exploring Spiritual and Psychological Issues at the End of Life. The study served as the basis for his doctoral dissertation (Interdisciplinary PhD, UBC 1999) for a book, entitled What Dying People Want: Practical Wisdom for the End-of-Life and for the founding of the Centre for Practitioner Renewal at Providence Health Care. Throughout his career David has worked to integrate medicine, psychology and the social sciences as a clinician and a researcher. This is evident in the programs he has founded, namely the Palliative Care Program at St. Paul’s Hospital, the Veterans Transition Program, the Centre for Practitioner Renewal (CPR), and most recently, The Men’s Initiative. His work at the CPR focused on sustaining health care providers in the work place, understanding the effect of being in the presence of suffering and working with health care providers in addressing resilience, communication and healthy relationships in the workplace. While no longer working at the CPR, David continues this work as a consultant to health care teams and services, locally, provincially and nationally. Since the onset of the pandemic, David, along with his colleagues, has been involved in developing a program of support for physicians who are working with those who have experienced the coronavirus. His primary focus is that of a co-founder of The Men’s Initiative, an endeavour that seeks to enhance the integrity and well-being of men for the benefit of families, communities and the globe. Linda MacNutt Linda MacNutt MSW RSW integrates her professional background in nursing and social work working as member of an interdisciplinary consulting team with a focus on collegial, meaningful relationships, resilience and the delivery of compassionate care. Her social work career has seen 34 years work experience in Child Welfare, Mental Health and Health Care in both urban and rural settings. Health Care has been her predominate field of practice involving work with patients and families primarily in the adult specialty areas of Nephrology: Dialysis and Transplant and Cardiology: Transplant and Healthy Heart. Since 2001 the focus of Linda’s work has addressed the care and well being of health care staff in acute and residential care settings. From 2001-2008 she collaboratively developed and coordinated the Cumulative and Critical Incident Stress Management program (CCISM) at Providence Health Care. Linda is a Certified trainer for 1 on 1 Provider Training and for the group Resilience Advantage program developed by the HeartMath Institute in Boulder Creek, USA. She is a member of ICISF and TIR. One of the founding members of the Provincial Disaster Psychosocial Services Program (DPS) Linda is also a council member representing the BC Association of Social Workers. Associated with DPS she co-facilitates DPS Psychological First Aid (PFA) training and may be called upon to respond during disaster events. Dr. Hilary Pearson Dr. Pearson has an MA in Counselling Psychology and interdisciplinary PhD in Curriculum and Instruction from UBC. Hilary worked as a psychotherapist in the Centre for Practitioner Renewal (CPR) at Providence Health Care for 11 years and served as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Practice Medicine at UBC for 7 years. Hilary has broad experience in trauma repair and in alleviating or preventing vicarious traumatic stress, compassion fatigue and moral distress. This includes work with First Nations survivors of residential schools, practitioners involved in residential school healing, physicians, and multi-disciplinary health care teams. As part of a team of interdisciplinary consultants, her current focus is working with health care providers and organizations to enhance vitality, sustainability, and the delivery of relationship centred compassionate care. Dr. Paul Whitehead Paul Whitehead completed his MA and PhD in counselling psychology at the University of BC, and has been a registered psychologist since 2008. He has worked for over 20 years in the field of psychological trauma, vicarious trauma and work-related stress, which has included over 12 years working with individuals, teams and groups of health care providers with the Centre for Practitioner Renewal at Providence Health Care in Vancouver. He is currently an associate clinical professor with the Department of Family Practice at the University of BC, clinical supervisor and case consultant with the BC Society for Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse (BCSMSSA) and national clinical director for the Veterans Transition Network. His current focus is on the use of team and group-oriented approaches to develop resilience and address the impact of work-related stress, vicarious trauma and post-traumatic stress amongst health care providers, first responders and veterans.

Funding awarded to researchers to optimize blood product use

Through the Blood Efficiency Accelerator Program, Canadian Blood Services supports projects that improve the use of blood products. These improvements can be realized at any point from vein to vein, that is from the point of blood collection, through manufacturing, distribution, and storage, to clinical use. Congratulations to the recent Blood Efficiency Accelerator Program recipients: Jason Acker (University of Alberta & Canadian Blood Services) Calvino Cheng (Dalhousie University) Andrew Shih (University of British Columbia) These projects will increase our understanding of how to optimize
April 30, 2020