The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) formally lifted its longstanding ban on blood donations from men who have sex with other men (MSM) on Monday, releasing guidance instead requiring the MSM population to remain celibate for a year before donating blood.
Although the change overturns one of the last remaining federal bans on LGBT Americans, critics of the policy are still unhappy with the 12-month deferral for gay and bisexual men. The new regulation, they argue, amounts to medically unnecessary discrimination based on sexual orientation.
“This new policy prevents men from donating life-saving blood based solely on their sexual orientation rather than actual risk to the blood supply,” said David Stacy, government affairs director for the Human Rights Campaign, in a statement. “While it’s a step in the right direction toward an ideal policy that reflects the best scientific research, it still falls far short of a fully acceptable solution because it continues to stigmatize gay and bisexual men. It simply cannot be justified in light of current scientific research and updated blood screening technology.”
Kelsey Louie — CEO of the GMHC, an HIV/AIDS prevention and advocacy group — offered a similar rebuke.
“Heterosexuals are given no such restrictions, even if their sexual behavior places them at high risk for HIV,” said Louie in a statement on the 12-month deferral. “In practice, the new policy is still a continuation of the lifetime ban and ignores the modern science of HIV-testing technology while perpetuating the stereotype that all gay and bisexual men are inherently dangerous. Blood donation policies should be based on science, not stigma.”
Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley also weighed in with his disapproval on Twitter:
.@US_FDA should lift blood ban on gay and bisexual men. A 1 year ban is still discriminatory and doesn't look at actual risk factors. #LGBT
— Martin O'Malley (@MartinOMalley) December 21, 2015
Monday’s guidance follows the FDA’s formal proposal in May to replace its lifetime ban on blood donations from the MSM population with a 12-month deferral. The policy change was championed by numerous medical organizations — including the American Medical Association, American Red Cross, America’s Blood Centers, American Association of Blood Banks and the American Plasma Users Coalition — based on scientific advancements that allow for blood banks to detect HIV in a donor sample soon after infection.









