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Vegas
05-24-2007, 04:14 PM
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/thrive/2007/may/23/052308003.html

Gay men remain banned for life from donating blood, the government said Wednesday, leaving in place - for now - a 1983 prohibition meant to prevent the spread of HIV through transfusions.

The Food and Drug Administration reiterated its long-standing policy on its Web site Wednesday, more than a year after the Red Cross and two other blood groups criticized the policy as "medically and scientifically unwarranted."

"I am disappointed, I must confess," said Dr. Celso Bianco, executive vice president of America's Blood Centers, whose members provide nearly half the nation's blood supply.

Before giving blood, all men are asked if they have had sex, even once, with another man since 1977. Those who say they have are permanently banned from donating. The FDA said those men are at increased risk of infection by HIV that can be transmitted to others by blood transfusion.

In March 2006, the Red Cross, the international blood association AABB and America's Blood Centers proposed replacing the lifetime ban with a one-year deferral following male-to-male sexual contact. New and improved tests, which can detect HIV-positive donors within just 10 to 21 days of infection, make the lifetime ban unnecessary, the blood groups told the FDA.

In a document posted Wednesday, the FDA said it would change its policy if given data that show doing so wouldn't pose a "significant and preventable" risk to blood recipients.

"It is a way of saying, 'Whatever was presented to us was not sufficient to make us change our minds,'" Bianco said.

The FDA said HIV tests currently in use are highly accurate, but still cannot detect the virus 100 percent of the time. The estimated HIV risk from a unit of blood is currently about one per 2 million in the United States, according to the agency.

Critics of the exclusionary policy said it bars potential healthy donors, despite the increasing need for donated blood, and discriminates against gays. The FDA recognized the policy defers many healthy donors but rejected the suggestion it's discriminatory.

Anyone who's used intravenous drugs or been paid for sex also is permanently barred from donating blood.

hannitykillspuppies
05-24-2007, 05:28 PM
wait only gay guys can get aids?

LSU
05-24-2007, 05:31 PM
wait only gay guys can get aids?


Depends on if you pitch or catch.

The person receiving has a much much higher chance of catching HIV than the person giving...which is why women and gay men have a higher risk of contraction.

Iron Jaw
05-24-2007, 08:23 PM
Though homosexual males make up 1.51 % (U.S. Census Bureau, 2000) percent of the U.S. population (depending upon which survey one believes - there are variances from as low as under 1 percent to as high as 10 percent), 44 percent of AIDS cases are from that portion of the population, and 61 percent of all male cases. Anal sex is the most risky form of unprotected sex. And instead of declining in that segment of the population, the infection rate has actually risen by 8 percent. Of the 157,252 persons in the U.S. diagnosed with the virus in the 2005-2006 period, 112,106 were men and 45,146 were women. More than 68,400 men acknowledged having had sex with other men.

Thus, it is understandable that the the Red Cross, the international blood association AABB and America's Blood Centers continue to disqualify males who have had sex with other males.

Heck, I get declined every time I try to donate - and I'm married, a completely heterosexual, one-woman man for the last 18 years, and they still decline me. Why? Because I take trips out of the U.S. every year or every other year. I guess risk factors from other blood borne diseases are more present in those who travel to certain places around the world. I'm completely healthy, but the screening process eliminates me every time I try (at the Border Patrol Station, we have blood donation personnel from the Red Cross visit at least twice a year).

LSU
05-24-2007, 08:26 PM
Heck, I get declined every time I try to donate - and I'm married, a completely heterosexual, one-woman man for the last 18 years, and they still decline me. Why? Because I take trips out of the U.S. every year or every other year. I guess risk factors from other blood borne diseases are more present in those who travel to certain places around the world. I'm completely healthy, but the screening process eliminates me every time I try (at the Border Patrol Station, we have blood donation personnel from the Red Cross visit at least twice a year).


Malaria most likely. There are quite a few other bloodborne parasites, but malaria is the grandaddy of them all.

Vegas
05-24-2007, 10:02 PM
Malaria most likely. There are quite a few other bloodborne parasites, but malaria is the grandaddy of them all.

My best friend has had malaria more than once. He's described it for me and it's definitely not a picnic.

LSU
05-24-2007, 10:05 PM
My best friend has had malaria more than once. He's described it for me and it's definitely not a picnic.



Yeah, and there are 4 different kinds. The most common one is a picnic relative to the other three. I've heard it's terrible as well.

pnkpanther
05-25-2007, 09:28 AM
plus if you get the blood of a gay you become gay, it's like vampire thing


BUT in all seriousness, high risk groups are prevented from giving blood, i dont have a problem. Although the fastest growing group getting aids is black women.

LSU
05-25-2007, 12:01 PM
plus if you get the blood of a gay you become gay, it's like vampire thing


BUT in all seriousness, high risk groups are prevented from giving blood, i dont have a problem. Although the fastest growing group getting aids is black women.



In the US or worldwide?

pnkpanther
05-25-2007, 12:26 PM
In the US or worldwide?

both