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New blood donation rules would still exclude many gay men
NPR.org ^ | 12/24/2014 | Steven W. Thrasher

Posted on 12/25/2014 8:38:39 AM PST by NetAddicted

On Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration recommended a change in the discriminatory and unscientific policy that effectively prohibited men who have sex with men from donating blood for life. Those guidelines kept any man who had sex with another man — even just once — since 1977 from donating blood forever.

While gay discrimination has been reduced in so many other areas of life, up until now, there hasn't been enough medical or political will to intervene on the blood ban. That policy perpetuated stigma without improving safety.

However, the new policy would ban blood donation for men who have had sex with another man for the past year. So the most likely outcome is that the vast majority of gay or bisexual men still won't be able to donate blood.

And I'm OK with that.

I've researched, written and thought about the FDA's blood ban for years, with an intense, personal interest. I first donated blood when I was sixteen at the Oxnard High School blood drive, while reading Interview with the Vampire. (The novel was very gay, but I didn't yet know that I was, too.)

Blood donation and products loomed large in a family in which both my late father and sister had cancer and relied on them. So I donated blood, plasma and platelets as often as I was allowed. When I finally realized I was gay in my mid-twenties, and still hadn't had sex with a man, I experienced a hematological twist on Elaine's "spongeworthy" conundrum from Seinfeld, and asked myself if a particular man I was going to lose my virginity to was worth giving up donating blood.

My college thesis was on pioneering African American hematologist Charles Drew, and my first ever investigative feature in a national magazine was on the FDA's blood donation ban. Writing that article for the Advocate, I discovered that, while I do have a problem with the lifetime ban, I don't have a problem with banning men who have sex with men in the past year. Most years of the past decade (but not all, sadly) this would have included me.

There is no science — none — that suggests that, if a man had sex with another man in 1978, you couldn't take his blood and safely screen it for HIV. A one-year ban, however, would be based on the risk assessments of a practice — the practice of a man having sex with another man — and not unscientifically shaming gay men. This might sound like a fine difference. But it's an important one.

As I understand it, the act of a man having sex with another man imposes a risk on his potential blood nation on the same level as taking IV drugs, having been incarcerated, or having had sex with someone who is an IV drug user or has been incarcerated. The flaw in the lifetime ban, where it breaks with any sound scientific reasoning, is in pretending this risk lasts a lifetime; at most, such a risk lasts a year. For example, people who have been in jail for more than 72 hours are only banned for a year.

People who want to eliminate the ban altogether often ask me, "But don't they test all the blood which is collected?" Yes, they do. But there are highly complicated statistical models created to ensure the safety of our blood supply, and those models argue there is good reason to impose donation restrictions on populations who engage in certain risky practices. Figuring in the incubation period of HIV to show up in a test, and the statistical likelihood of lab mistakes (such as false negatives, or mixed up blood units), I think it is reasonable public health policy to exclude blood from the pool which would be collected from people whose practices (not their identity) increase their likelihood of being HIV positive.

Again, this would include me. According to the Centers for Disease Control, "African American gay and bisexual men accounted for almost as many new HIV infections as white gay and bisexual men, despite the differences in population size of African Americans compared to whites." Also, while the overall gay male population of the US is only 2%, according to the CDC, this group "accounted for three-fourths of all estimated new HIV infections annually from 2008 to 2010." It also doesn't matter if you think you are negative: less than half of "gay and bisexual men aged 18 to 24 years knew of their infection."

This is can be hard to say aloud because the virus has such stigma, but if you are a man who regularly has sex with other men, you are demographically more likely to have HIV. According to the advocacy group Gay Men's Health Crisis, men who have sex with men, on average, "are over 44 times more likely than other men to contract HIV, and over 40 times more likely than women to contract HIV." It is irrelevant if that sex is in what is supposed to be a monogamous relationship. (Indeed, the best research available suggests that about half of male gay couples are openly non-monogamous.)

Critics are right to argue there has been a double standard here; while some projections suggest that one in three black men could be incarcerated in his lifetime, all black men are not outright banned from donating blood. People who have been incarcerated have been only been banned for a year. Meanwhile, all gay men have been effectively banned en masse for life.

The problem with this sensible solution the FDA is finally advocating — a one year ban for a man after his last time having sex with a man – is that it's politically unpopular. Gay men don't want to be told they still can't donate if they've had sex with men in the past year. But after scares of sero-conversion through blood transfusion, like Ryan White at the 1980s, the FDA doesn't want to do anything at all that could create the perception that any donation was compromised, even one in 10 million.

Furthermore, in a population as large as the United States, the donor blood pool is so large, that gay men's blood isn't really needed (another politically unpopular thing to say). So the push to revise a policy — one that highlights a discriminatory past against gay men, which will only piss off gay men presently, and which will only benefit men who have sex less frequently than once a year — has little political support.

However, no matter how popular or unpopular, the FDA needed to make this change in a policy that scrutinizes the most intimate aspect of our bodies so that it reflects the real science of risk and not to pander to stigma. I am relieved they have finally done so.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: homosexualagenda
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He says less than half 18-24 year olds are aware of their HIV+ status. I read it's projected 50% of homosexuals will be HIV+ by age 50. Oh yeah, let's let them donate blood!
1 posted on 12/25/2014 8:38:39 AM PST by NetAddicted
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To: NetAddicted

Flamers excluded.


2 posted on 12/25/2014 8:40:06 AM PST by Old Yeller (Civil rights are for civilized people.)
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To: NetAddicted

And it’s still all based on an honor system.


3 posted on 12/25/2014 8:43:47 AM PST by headstamp 2
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To: NetAddicted
While gay discrimination has been reduced in so many other areas of life, up until now, there hasn't been enough medical or political will to intervene on the blood ban.

I got no further than the above. This is total b.s. Let the medical experts decide; leave the politics out.

Why am I supporting NPR through taxes to produce this drivel? Have not listened in 15 years due to the overwhelming bias.

4 posted on 12/25/2014 8:44:51 AM PST by The_Media_never_lie (The media must be defeated any way it can be done.)
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To: NetAddicted

The Gaystapo desperately want HIV/AIDS to jump full force into the breeder community, so that their immoral, dangerous, and perverted lifestyle will seem more “normal.” Stunningly illogical, of course.


5 posted on 12/25/2014 8:46:05 AM PST by twister881
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To: Old Yeller

There are many people banned from giving blood.

Among those are people who spent time in Europe during the outbreaks of mad cow disease.

Also banned are people involved in prostitution, either as a buyer or seller of such services.

Point is, homosexuals are not singled out due to a hatred of homosexuality. They are among a group of people who have risk factors for their health.

This ban was put on place in the first place based on a dispassionate review of risk factors for disease, not based on passing judgment on someone’s lifestyle.

But apparently with the homosexual pressure groups, everything is viewed through the lens of how it allegedly discriminates against a homosexual. With no concerns about how such policies affect everyone else.


6 posted on 12/25/2014 8:47:30 AM PST by Dilbert San Diego (s)
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To: headstamp 2

are all blood donations tested?


7 posted on 12/25/2014 8:50:34 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Defund , sue, impeach. Overturn Obamacare, amnesty.)
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To: NetAddicted
New blood donation rules would still exclude many gay men disease-ridden sexual perverts.

Fixed it.

8 posted on 12/25/2014 8:50:40 AM PST by PROCON (Merry CHRISTmas!!)
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To: NetAddicted

Median age at death of homosexual white males in the U.S. is 47. For homosexual black males, 43. And they want to tell us that their dangerous, filthy, disease-ridden lifestyle is “normal?”


9 posted on 12/25/2014 8:51:10 AM PST by twister881
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To: NetAddicted

This is insanity. I recommend FReepers start their own family blood bank. Many such services available.


10 posted on 12/25/2014 8:52:16 AM PST by montag813
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To: NetAddicted

I had Hepatitus A back in 1959 and still can’t give blood. My oldest daughter was born in Germany in 1984, and because of Chernobyl and of the European mad-cow scare of the mid-80s cant be a blood donor.

When will the FDA decide that we both can be blood donors?


11 posted on 12/25/2014 8:53:03 AM PST by GreyFriar (Spearhead - 3rd Armored Division 75-78 & 83-87)
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To: morphing libertarian

Yes, but if you have just been infected, it won’t show up in the screening tests for 2-3 weeks.


12 posted on 12/25/2014 8:55:32 AM PST by NetAddicted (Just looking)
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To: PROCON

I wanted to change the title, but didn’t know if I should/could.


13 posted on 12/25/2014 8:56:50 AM PST by NetAddicted (Just looking)
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To: NetAddicted

No, don’t change anything, copyright rules donchaknow, and the mods get grumpy...


14 posted on 12/25/2014 8:59:48 AM PST by PROCON (Merry CHRISTmas!!)
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To: NetAddicted

And they should be excluded if they live that lifestyle. It’s known to be highly promiscuous with many anonymous partners. Common sense prevails at keast 3 times I know of now in the past 6 years (this decision, Hobby Lobby, and Chick-fi-la)


15 posted on 12/25/2014 9:00:02 AM PST by jsanders2001
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To: NetAddicted

and when is the screening done?


16 posted on 12/25/2014 9:02:49 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Defund , sue, impeach. Overturn Obamacare, amnesty.)
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To: headstamp 2

only partially....the blood itself is tested for numerous things before being used

Depending on the blood bank you use if you tell the truth they will not spoil the donation but rather use it in research (thinking specifically of the Stanford Blood Bank)


17 posted on 12/25/2014 9:04:56 AM PST by Nifster
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To: morphing libertarian

Well, it’s recommended homosexuals get HIV tested once a year, but, as the author pointed out, half of HIV+ homosexuals aren’t aware of that fact, which means they’re not getting tested once a year.


18 posted on 12/25/2014 9:07:11 AM PST by NetAddicted (Just looking)
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To: NetAddicted

This is all complete nonsense in that blood is tested anyway for all kinds of diseases.


19 posted on 12/25/2014 9:08:08 AM PST by CodeToad (Islam should be outlawed and treated as a criminal enterprise!)
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To: CodeToad

all KNOWN diseases. It is nonsense in that the most militant ones will lie about their status.


20 posted on 12/25/2014 9:11:55 AM PST by NonValueAdded (Pointing out dereliction of duty is NOT fear mongering, especially in a panDEMic)
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