The blood debate continues
I recently read this Pink News article entitled “Government defends ban on gay men giving blood”.
Ms Primarolo, the Minister of State for Public Health, said:
“Current policy excludes men who have ever had sex with men, whatever their sexual orientation, from blood donation.
“The United Kingdom adopts a highly precautionary approach to blood safety.
“The guiding principle is that if the best available evidence shows that there are reasonable grounds to believe that a course of action will improve the safety of the blood, this action should be taken.
“The Department is committed to regularly reviewing this evidence, and has asked its expert advisory committee on the Safety of Blood, Tissues and Organs to do this in 2009.”
(from: Pink News Last accessed: 12th February 09)
So let’s look at the debate For & Against
For
Against
Thinking about it I think the NBS are hiding behind the “safety of the blood” statement. They refuse to recognise that as men who have sex with men are a smaller group and as such their rates of HIV transmittion are always going to be higher than that of a much larger community.
Interesting linka:
Facts missing in HIV-blood debate
NBS – Position Statement
PETER TATCHELL says the ban on gay blood donors is based on homophobic myths that stereotype and demonise gay men.
NUS – LGBT Donation not discrimination
My Telegraph – Mike Rouse
The last link My Telegraph – Mike Rouse, relates to a online petition to the Prime Ministers No. 10 site that I signed (see No. 10 Petitions). A total of 5,234 signatures signed the petition at the time. But I think we didn’t have a massive response as many people in the hetrosexual world are totally unaware of this ban.
This post demonstrates that there aren’t many reasons against why men who have sex with men giving blood, yet there are many reasons for men who have sex with men to give blood.
Just food for thought,
Antony
Filed Under: Gay & Campness, Health, Thinking
Tags: blood giving ban, debate, gay, hetrosexual wor, hetrosexual world, HIV, National blood service
Posted on: Monday 16 February 2009 @ 17:50 by Antony





Comments (3)
I’m surprised the ban is still in place, given the screenign that takes place and the somewhat blanket exception. As a NHS employee I’m not sure I see similar attitudes replicated elsewhere; I think it may be a knee-jerk reaction to all the failures in the 80s when people got infected after transfusions rather than a homophobicattitude per se – but I suspect it would not stand up to a robust legal challenge. Interesting post…x
The reality is this ban harms the people that the service was set up to save, the people who need blood. If I ever needed a blood transfusion I will -probably- be fine, but there is a risk that the stores will run out on anyone, if I can’t give blood now, they stand the risk of losing someone.
here’s me getting all moral high-groundish, to be honest if I could give blood, they would have to pay me, I’m scared of needles, and have them only when I really REALLY need them. Someone once said to me “just don’t tell them your gay’, which doesn’t make sense, why willingly break a rule of an organisation which HINDERS the organisations cause, I feel bad that they are short of blood but all I have to say to them is, “WAKE UP, HAVE SOME THOUGHT”
First off Stonewall have recently took on the National Blood Service regarding this ban (see Pink News – Stonewall calls for an end to ban on gay men giving blood). About bloody time Stonewall!
I’ve been trying to raise some awareness about it for years (verbally to anyone that will listen) as has Peter Tatchell who wrote on the topic from 1996 onwards.
It just annoys me that Stonewall have only just decided to chanllenge it.
To Mike – I understand the historic context in the 80′s but they have come along way since then! Oh and interesting you used to work for the NHS, so did I.
To Sye – I’d force you to give it for free! Ha ha, I’d talk you in to it, in return for lunch. We could be blood buddies.
Oh and if you want to sign a No. 10 Petition about changing the rules you can at: http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/NBSRuleChange/ (This is the 2nd one! The first one was not acted up on but only had just over 5, 000 signatures.)
Hugs to all & rant over,
A x
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