Sheila North explains the benefits of letting Indigenous students study close to home
Sheila North explains the benefits of letting Indigenous students study close to home
The tightening of Canada’s asylum laws was an inevitability: Michael Barutciski in the Globe and Mail

Critics slam for-profit plasma donation clinics [Video]

Categories
Canadian National News

Curtis Brandell has witnessed the horrors of Canada’s tainted blood scandal, the country’s worst public health disaster, firsthand. 

Two of his uncles suffered from hemophilia, a genetic disorder in which the blood doesn’t clot normally, and were infected with both HIV and hepatitis C from contaminated blood during the height of the crisis in the 1980s. One died. The other has been housebound for 25 years. 

More from The Star & partners

Please log in to use this feature

Log In or Sign Up

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

To join the conversation set a first and last name in your user profile.

Conversations are opinions of our readers and are subject to the Community Guidelines. Toronto Star does not endorse these opinions.

Oren Cass: Free markets and liberty are not ends unto themselves
Oren Cass: Free markets and liberty are not ends unto themselves
Unravelling MAiD in Canada: Rethinking policy and practice