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- Title
Canadian policy changes for alcohol‐based hand rubs during the COVID‐19 pandemic and unintended risks.
- Authors
Mustafa, Rana; Purdy, Sarah K.; Nelson, Fina B.; Tse, Timothy J.; Wiens, Daniel J.; Shen, Jianheng; Reaney, Martin J. T.
- Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic led to major changes in public policies to address supply chain disruption and escalated the price of consumer disinfectant products. To address market demands on alcohol‐based hand rubs and disinfectants, Health Canada implemented major changes to the regulations regarding composition, handling, transportation, and packaging to insure product availability. Furthermore, accelerated licensing of ingredients and packaging did not meet standard medical quality guidelines yet were authorized for manufacturing and packaging of alcohol‐based hand rubs and disinfectants. The accountability associated with these policy changes were reactive, including industry self‐reporting, consumer reporting, and Health Canada advisories and recalls that were responsive to products after they were available in the market. Nonetheless, Canadian public health policy increased hand sanitizers availability. However, some of the interim policies have raised major public health concerns associated with ethanol quality, packaging, and labeling, and enforcement of regulations. In this paper, we review the changes in the Canadian regulations amid the current pandemic and we evaluate the unintended health risks that might arise from these changes.
- Subjects
CANADA. Health Canada; COVID-19 pandemic; HAND sanitizers; HEALTH policy; PUBLIC health; SUPPLY chain disruptions
- Publication
World Medical & Health Policy, 2023, Vol 15, Issue 3, p273
- ISSN
1948-4682
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/wmh3.463