TORONTO -- While the Canadian Blood Services implores Canadians to give ā€œthe greatest giftā€ as hospital capacities are threatened during the COVID-19 pandemic this holiday season, one MP is continuing a push for a change in eligibility rules that ban some gay men from donating.

Eric Duncan, the first openly gay Conservative MP, told CTVā€™s Your Morning that the policies arenā€™t only outdated but actively hurt Canadians during an already difficult year.

ā€œI see Canadian Blood Services out asking for urgent donations right now, particularly during the second wave of COVID-19. There are many gay men in this country who would be eligible if the rules were changed,ā€ he said.

ā€œI find it personal and it bothers me that Canadian Blood Services is asking for donations, needing it, and rightfully so. Weā€™re in a challenging time. To have something so evident before us -- a way to right two wrongs here -- to allow more Canadians to support Canadian Blood Services and make donations and also end this stigma. Thereā€™s no reason why this couldnā€™t be done.ā€

The donor eligibility rules, which now require a ā€œdeferral periodā€ for men who have sex with men but began as an outright ban, have changed in recent years. Still, they donā€™t go far enough for Duncan and others who believe the policy should move to a gender-neutral screening process based on sexual behaviour not orientation.

In 2013, Health Canada approved a ā€œdeferral periodā€ of five years for men who have sex with men to donate, then a one-year deferral period in 2016. Last year, Health Canada approved a request from the Canadian Blood Services and Hema-Quebec to further reduce the ban to three months.

Earlier this year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised that more changes would come to the policy ā€œvery soon.ā€ That was nearly six months ago. Since then, the resumption of elective surgeries put a worrisome strain on the national blood supply and the COVID-19 pandemic which caused dramatic blood shortages in the spring has now resurged with new lockdowns. At the time, there were close to 10,000 confirmed cases of the COVID-19 in the country and about 8,000 related deaths. As of Dec. 7, deaths neared 13,000 and there were more than 423,000 confirmed cases.

For Duncan and others pushing for a change to blood donor eligibility, the ban is not only cutting off a source to boost supply, itā€™s a human rights issue.

ā€œItā€™s discrimination and I think it creates an unfair stigma against men who have sex with men,ā€ Duncan told CTVā€™s Your Morning. ā€œItā€™s based on an outdated myth from a generation ago.ā€

Late last month, Duncan pushed Health Minister Patty Hajdu in the House of Commons on why the ban hasnā€™t been reversed and if she would accept a blood donation from him. She didn't respond to that question, but emphasized the independence of the non-governmental non-profits Canadian Blood Services and Hema-Quebec and ongoing efforts to fund research that would reverse the ban.

"We have been funding both the Canadian Blood Service and Hema-Quebecā€‹ to better understand how to end the blood ban," said Hajdu. "I agree with the member opposite, we need to take stronger steps to ensure they have the research they need."