Thursday, June 10, 2010

End the Antiquated MSM Blood Ban!

Today Open Left has organized a blogswarm asking readers to take action to revise/end the FDA's ban on men who have sex with men (MSM) from donating blood. The Health and Human Services Committee on Blood Safety and Availability is deliberating for the third time since the ban has been implemented over whether changes are needed.

Please take a minute to email Dr. Holmberg and the Committee at jerry.holmberg@hhs.gov. Urge a revision of the policy that incorporates sound medical, scientific, and non-discriminatory guidelines.

Here is a letter summarizing the scientific and social reasons for revising the ban for your convenience. Feel free to copy and paste into an e-mail:


Jerry A. Holmberg, PhD
Executive Secretary
Advisory Committee on Blood Safety and Availability
Office of Public Health and Science
Department of Health and Human Services
1101 Wooton Parkway, Suite 250
Rockville, MD 20852

June 10, 2010

Dear Dr. Holmberg,

I am pleased that the Health and Human Services Advisory Committee on Blood Safety and Availability (ACBSA) is planning to review the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) decades-long ban on blood donation by any man who has had sex with another man since 1977. I strongly urge the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to review its policy prohibiting gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM) from donating blood.

The FDA's current blood donor eligibility policies are largely inconsistent, imposing significantly less restrictive deferrals to heterosexual men and women who engage in high-risk sexual behavior, yet banning gay and bisexual men who are HIV-negative, consistently practice safe sex, or are in monogamous, long-term relationships. This policy reinforces inaccurate stereotypes about gay men and HIV, and results in a significant loss of healthy blood donors.

The advent of new HIV testing technologies, which can detect HIV directly and has a window period of only 9-11 days after infection, has provided scientific and technological reasons to reconsider the policy. In the face of chronic blood shortages in the nation's blood supply, the unnecessary exclusion of large numbers of HIV-negative blood donors may harm patients in need of blood transfusions.

I join a growing consensus of voices who have called for reform of the FDA's donor eligibility policy. Many public health experts, the American Red Cross, the American Association of Blood Banks, America's Blood Centers, and others have supported reforming the policy. Additionally, 18 U.S. Senators, as well as U.S. Representatives, have recently sent letters to the FDA calling for the long-standing policy's review and modification.

It is both timely and necessary that an exhaustive review of alternative policies is conducted. I encourage Health and Human Services (HHS) and the FDA to act quickly to address our mutual concern for expanding the blood donor pool and ensuring the safety and adequacy of our nation's blood supply.

4 comments:

Scott said...

I couldn't agree more, it's time to end the ban. I live in Australia, and although I cannot donate blood, I still used to get material in the mail from the Australian Red Cross asking for financial donations. That really got my blood boiling. So I sent them a letter saying something to the effect of 'you won't take my blood but you'll have my money'. Not long after that, the Australian Red Cross rolled out the campaign "It takes someone special to give blood". That campaign didn't last long.

Anonymous said...

I read somewhere that lifting the blood ban could add 219,000 more pints yearly. The FDA ban is archaic and was applied in the late 70's, when not much was known about AIDS. Well, now we are more educated. And it's rather ridiculous that a woman who might have 100+ sexual partners in a year can donate over a man who is in a monogamous relationship with another man.

Carrie

Anonymous said...

Well, the ban was not lifted today.

I find it odd that we can't donate blood, but we can be organ donors. Frankly, we need to organize every LGBT person to refuse to be organ donors. If they don't want our blood, they should not get anything else.

Anonymous said...

I had an employer give a vacation day to those who donated to the blood drive. Of course I wasn't allowed to donate so I wasn't eligble for the time off. It is completely wrong! It is just another way to discriminate and it shouldn't be allowed!

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