04-06-2013, 11:12 PM
Whoa! Lots of misconceptions here. First of all, I am a nurse and I completely agree with MysteryGuest. The policy is discriminatory and was put into place in 1985. At the time, the primary fear, and a logical one was AIDS. Testing for the AIDS virus was not a very routine procedure and there was tremendous fear in this country at the time, for good reason. However, today, that ban and especially the way that the regulations are written are simply discriminatory. There is a great article here:
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=11...WCWuK_nZ14
An excerpt: "Under the current rule, a heterosexual woman who has had sex with numerous AIDS-infected partners can give blood after waiting a year, but a gay man who’s been celibate since 1978 is banned. Gay activists say that’s discrimination.
“The existing policy is archaic and discriminatory because it falsely assumes that all gay men are HIV-positive regardless of their sexual behavior. At the same time, it allows heterosexuals to donate blood even if they have participated in risky sexual or drug-use behavior,” says Martin Algaze, spokesman for Gay Men’s Health Crisis.
Clearly, this regulation is archaic, discriminatory, and prevents many healthy, potential donors (like myself and MysteryGuest) from donating to the blood supply. As far as the "science behind the decision", quite frankly there is none, and suggesting otherwise really smacks of internalized homophobia.
Here's another article on the current debate:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/06/health/gay-men-blood-ban
Having said all of that, my recommendation is to NOT LIE during the screening process. There are other ways to get involved and to protest the discriminatory position of the nation's blood banks. Look on-line for gay organizations working for this cause and get involved.
As for some of the other comments here, gay men may be at higher risk for AIDS and Hepatitis, but the blood supply in the U.S. is one of the most stringently tested medical supplies in the world. Generalizations about who gay people are, and how "unsafe" they are simply because they are gay is extremely prejudicial and filled with self-loathing at a certain level. Regulations sometimes made sense for a particular period of time. But just because they exist, does not mean that they should not be challenged. Discrimination has been legalized many times before throughout the history of the world. This is just one more case of it that needs to end.
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=11...WCWuK_nZ14
An excerpt: "Under the current rule, a heterosexual woman who has had sex with numerous AIDS-infected partners can give blood after waiting a year, but a gay man who’s been celibate since 1978 is banned. Gay activists say that’s discrimination.
“The existing policy is archaic and discriminatory because it falsely assumes that all gay men are HIV-positive regardless of their sexual behavior. At the same time, it allows heterosexuals to donate blood even if they have participated in risky sexual or drug-use behavior,” says Martin Algaze, spokesman for Gay Men’s Health Crisis.
Clearly, this regulation is archaic, discriminatory, and prevents many healthy, potential donors (like myself and MysteryGuest) from donating to the blood supply. As far as the "science behind the decision", quite frankly there is none, and suggesting otherwise really smacks of internalized homophobia.
Here's another article on the current debate:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/06/health/gay-men-blood-ban
Having said all of that, my recommendation is to NOT LIE during the screening process. There are other ways to get involved and to protest the discriminatory position of the nation's blood banks. Look on-line for gay organizations working for this cause and get involved.
As for some of the other comments here, gay men may be at higher risk for AIDS and Hepatitis, but the blood supply in the U.S. is one of the most stringently tested medical supplies in the world. Generalizations about who gay people are, and how "unsafe" they are simply because they are gay is extremely prejudicial and filled with self-loathing at a certain level. Regulations sometimes made sense for a particular period of time. But just because they exist, does not mean that they should not be challenged. Discrimination has been legalized many times before throughout the history of the world. This is just one more case of it that needs to end.