On May 8, Health Canada issued a consumer product advisory warning that the IQYEF Combined Smoke, Combustible Gas and Carbon Monoxide Alarm — sold through Amazon.ca and now removed from listing — may fail to detect the very hazards it is built to monitor. Health Canada's sampling determined the alarm carries no Canadian certification mark and may not meet the Residential Detectors Regulations. The fix is direct: stop using it, dispose of it, and replace it with a certified unit.
Two details make this case different from the cluster of uncertified-alarm warnings Canadian regulators have issued in recent weeks. First, the IQYEF unit is a triple-detector — built for households with natural gas or propane heat that need combustible-gas monitoring on top of smoke and carbon monoxide detection. A failure here is not just a missed fire signal. It is a missed gas-leak signal in homes that may have no other fixed gas detection installed. Second, the foreign distributor refused to cooperate with a voluntary recall, which is why Health Canada has issued an advisory rather than a formal recall — and why Amazon.ca buyers cannot assume they will receive direct notification.
This piece walks through what Health Canada said, how to identify the affected unit, why the triple-detector profile matters, what "advisory" means in this context, and the replacement principle Canadian households should apply.