Health Management Associates (Arkansas company)

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Health Management Associates is a defunct Arkansas-based company involved in a blood-management scandal during the 1980s.

HMA scandal

The Health Management Associates Scandal refers to the sale of tainted blood from HMA (a now defunct American company based in Arkansas) to Canadian blood banks.

HMA was contracted by the state of Arkansas to provide health care to prisoners in the state of Arkansas in the early to mid-1980s. This arrangement allowed HMA to collect blood from the prisoners. The blood, some of it proven to be infected with HIV and hepatitis C, was found in the Canadian blood supply. It was not found in American supplies because of a ban on prisoner blood use.

The president of HMA at that time was

Whitewater Scandal
to prove he was murdered.

The Krever Report

Justice Horace Krever led a

Royal Commission (public inquiry) in 1993 which uncovered the Arkansas prison blood scheme, as he reported in 1997. The primary purpose of the report was to work on ways of improving the Canadian blood system to avoid similar problems in the future. Also, the report makes mention of similar problems with prisoner blood collection practices in Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi, as well as concerns about blood in general from San Francisco.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Final report. Commission of Inquiry on the Blood System in Canada". collection.nlc-bnc.ca. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved 2015-01-10.

External links