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Sleeves Up

Summer vacations leading to drop in blood donations, Canadian Blood Services warns

Jul 6, 2026 | 9:44 AM

Canadian Blood Services is urging Saskatchewan residents to keep their blood donation appointments this summer as vacations and long weekends contribute to a seasonal drop in donations.

Aaron Barlow, Saskatchewan community development manager for Canadian Blood Services, said missed appointments are the biggest challenge the organization faces during the summer months.

“It is an annual thing that we can anticipate,” Barlow said. “Despite everything we do in terms of community outreach, working with our partners and speaking with media, we tend to see a little bit of a drop-off during the summer months, especially around long weekends and observances.”

Barlow said Canada has more than 40 million people, but only about 400,000 are regular blood donors. With that donor base aging and Canadian Blood Services aiming to recruit one million new donors by 2030, summer declines make it more difficult to meet patient demand.

He said even events such as Saskatchewan Roughrider games can affect attendance, while long weekends often leave donation appointments unfilled.

“The biggest thing that impacts our blood inventory is unfilled appointments,” Barlow said. “Right now, at our Saskatoon donor centre, between now and the end of July, we have close to 1,140 appointments that need to be filled to ensure we have adequate inventory to deliver to our partners, which in turn affects patients. Our Regina office has about 950 appointments that need to be filled by the end of July.”

While Saskatoon and Regina rely on regular donor centre appointments, Barlow said mobile clinics in smaller communities tend to have much stronger attendance.

He said donor centres in Saskatoon and Regina are typically about 50 per cent pre-booked, while the next two mobile clinics in Prince Albert are already full.

“Our mobile donor event in Prince Albert on July 27 is 100 per cent booked, and our next visit on Aug. 24 is also 100 per cent booked,” Barlow said. “A lot of our mobile donor events across Saskatchewan pre-book really well because supporters in those communities tend to rebook their next visit while they’re donating.”

Barlow said rural communities sometimes see a decline during seeding and harvest, but those decreases are generally smaller than the drop experienced by urban donor centres during the summer.

People interested in donating blood can find available appointments through the Give Blood app or online at blood.ca.

nick.nielsen@pattisonmedia.com