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Bill C-477

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1st Session, 41st Parliament,
60-61-62 Elizabeth II, 2011-2012-2013
house of commons of canada
BILL C-477
An Act to establish the Pan-Canadian Organ Donor Registry and to coordinate and promote organ donation throughout Canada
Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:
SHORT TITLE
Short title
1. This Act may be cited as the Organ Donor Registry Act.
INTERPRETATION
Definitions
2. The definitions in this section apply in this Act.
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means the Minister of Health.
“organ”
« organe »
“organ” includes any form of human tissue.
“organ donor”
« donneur d’organes » ou « donneur »
“organ donor” means a person who has consented to the use of all the organs or one or more specified organs of the person on death — or for whom such consent has been given by another person — and who will donate according to the laws of the province in which the person resided at the time the consent was lawfully given, or in which the donor dies or becomes incapable of giving consent.
“participating province”
« province participante »
“participating province” means a province that has enacted legislation that meets the requirements of this Act and that has entered into an agreement with the Minister under section 8.
“recipient”
« receveur »
“recipient” means a person who receives or who is intended to receive an organ from an organ donor.
“Registrar”
« directeur »
“Registrar” means the person appointed as Registrar of the Organ Donors Registry under section 4.
“Registry”
« Registre »
“Registry” means the Pan-Canadian Organ Donor Registry established under section 3.
PAN-CANADIAN ORGAN DONOR REGISTRY
Registry established
3. (1) The Registrar must establish and maintain a registry, to be known as the Pan-Canadian Organ Donor Registry.
Form of Registry
(2) The Registry is to consist of
(a) a compilation of information on organ donors and recipients; or
(b) a system that links such compilations held by others and facilitates access to such compilations.
Destruction of information
(3) The Registrar may destroy information kept in the Registry at the times and in the circumstances that may be prescribed by regulation.
Electronic format
(4) For greater certainty, the Registry may be established partly or entirely in electronic format.
STAFF
Registrar
4. (1) The Registry is to be administered by a chief executive officer appointed by the Minister and known as the Registrar of the Organ Donors Registry.
Registrar reports to Minister
(2) The Registrar must report to the Minister as the Minister directs.
Staff
(3) Any employees necessary to enable the Registrar to perform his or her duties and functions under this Act must be appointed in accordance with the Public Service Employment Act.
OBJECTS
Objects of Registry
5. (1) The objects of the Registry are
(a) to store, or provide a link between, information on organ donors in participating provinces;
(b) to maintain the information in a format that allows it to be provided quickly to persons authorized by a participating prov-ince to receive it for the purpose of identifying individuals who have consented or who may consent to be organ donors; and
(c) to match potential organ donors with recipients quickly and effectively.
Information to be kept confidential
(2) The information in the Registry is to be kept confidential except as necessary to fulfill the objects of the Registry.
PARTICIPATING PROVINCES
Standardization of provincial legislation
6. The Registrar must consult with the provinces in order to develop a national standard for the purposes of subsection 7(1), with the objective that as many provinces as possible become participating provinces.
Participating provinces
7. (1) For a province to become a participating province, it must make an agreement with the Minister under section 8 and it must have legislation that conforms to the national stand-ard developed under section 6 respecting
(a) the manner in which an organ donor or, on the organ donor’s incapacity or death, a person lawfully entitled to consent on the organ donor’s behalf may consent to organ donation;
(b) an organ donor’s right to refuse to donate any specified organ;
(c) the situations in which a donation is revo-cable, including whether the organ donor’s next of kin have the right to revoke a prior consent to donate made by a deceased organ donor;
(d) the procedure by which a determination of the death of an organ donor prior to removal of an organ must be made;
(e) the procedure by which the medical suitability of an organ donor must be determined;
(f) the sharing of information between prov-inces; and
(g) the overall management of organ donation within the province.
Other procedures to be followed
(2) The legislation of each participating province must set out the procedures to be followed within the province respecting
(a) the promotion of organ donation within the province;
(b) notification of the appropriate agency of the death or imminent death of a person who is or who may become an organ donor;
(c) the training of hospital staff who may be required to approach the families of patients for consent to the donation of an organ; and
(d) record keeping and the production of statistics.
Submission to Registrar
8. (1) A province wishing to become a participating province must submit to the Registrar a draft of its legislation.
Recommendation of Registrar
(2) The Registrar informs the province of any concerns that the Registrar has in respect of the draft legislation or, if the Registrar is of the opinion that the draft legislation complies with all of the requirements set out in section 7, makes a recommendation to the Minister that the province become a participating province.
Agreement with the province
(3) Once the Minister has received the recommendation from the Registrar, the Minister may enter into an agreement with the province which allows it to become a participating province.
EXEMPTION
Exemption from application of Act
9. (1) Recognizing the unique nature of the jurisdiction of the Government of Quebec with regard to health, and despite any other provision of this Act, the Government of Quebec may choose to be exempted from the application of this Act.
Payment
(2) If the Government of Quebec chooses to be exempted from the application of this Act under subsection (1), the Government of Canada must, in every calendar year, pay the Government of Quebec an amount equal to the amount of any additional expenses that would have been incurred by the Government of Canada in the previous calendar year had Quebec been a participating province within the meaning of this Act.
REGULATIONS
Regulations
10. The Governor in Council may make regulations for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this Act.
REPORT TO PARLIAMENT
Annual report
11. (1) The Registrar must, not later than April 1 in every year, prepare and submit to the Minister a report on the operation of the Registry during the previous year containing any recommendations the Registrar may wish to make concerning the Registry or organ donation in Canada.
Report laid before Parliament
(2) The Minister must cause the report submitted under subsection (1) to be laid before each House of Parliament on any of the first 15 days on which that House is sitting after the day on which the Minister receives the report.
Referred to committee
(3) The report referred to in subsection (2), must be referred to the appropriate committee of each House, as determined by the rules of that House, for consideration and report to the House.
Standing Committee on Health
(4) The appropriate committee of each House referred to in subsection (3) is the Standing Committee on Health or, in the event that there is not a Standing Committee on Health, the appropriate committee of each House.
Report to Parliament
(5) The committee must review the report and must cause its review and any recommendations to be laid before each House of Parliament on any of the first 15 days on which that House is sitting after the day on which the review is completed.
Published under authority of the Speaker of the House of Commons