U.S.
opens door to a change in blood donation policy for gay men
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[July 27, 2016]
By Toni Clarke
(Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration opened the door on Tuesday to a change in its blood donor
deferral recommendations, which currently prohibit donations from gay
men for a year following their last sexual encounter in order to reduce
the risk of transmitting HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
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In December the FDA overturned a 30-year ban on all blood donations
from men who have sex with men, saying the change was based on
science showing an indefinite ban was not necessary to prevent
transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus.
The FDA is now signaling it may go further.
Gay rights advocates say the latest update did not go far enough and
that the agency's recommendations should move closer to individual
risk assessments, which could, for example, look at whether an
individual has been in a monogamous relationship. Their criticism
intensified in the wake of a mass shooting at a gay nightclub in
Orlando, Florida, in June, which saw many gay men unable to donate
blood even as blood banks put out calls for donors.
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In a notice posted to the Federal Register, the FDA said it was
establishing a public docket for comment about its current
recommendations and that interested people should submit comments,
backed by scientific evidence, supporting alternative potential
policies to reduce the risk of HIV transmission.
Such suggestions "could include the feasibility of moving from the
existing time-based deferrals related to risk behaviors to alternate
deferral options, such as the use of individual risk assessments."
The agency said it would take the comments into account "as it
continues to reevaluate and update blood donor deferral policies as
new scientific information becomes available."
The FDA's action comes after 115 members of the U.S. House of
Representatives, led by Democrat Mike Quigley, vice chair of the
Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus, wrote to FDA Commissioner Robert
Califf calling on him to end the current policy, saying it
discriminated against men who have sex with men. A similar letter
was signed by 22 senators.
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In a statement on Tuesday, Quigley said he was "encouraged" by the
FDA's announcement.
"The tragedy at Pulse nightclub in Orlando highlighted the
discrimination gay and bisexual men face when attempting to donate
blood to those in need," he said.
"Moving towards an individual risk assessment would provide for a
fair, equitable, nondiscriminatory blood donation policy, one based
in science that allows all healthy Americans to safely donate
blood."
(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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