For the first time in 31 years, gay and bisexual men will soon be able to donate blood — with some major strings attached.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced on Tuesday it would recommend lifting its decades-old policy barring blood donations from men who’ve had sex with other men — even once — since 1977. That decision will end one of the last remaining federal bans on gay Americans imposed at the height of the AIDS epidemic.
In its place will be a one-year deferral policy that will allow gay and bisexual men to donate blood as long as they let a year pass without having sex with another man. More than 20 countries have replaced similar lifetime bans with deferral periods that vary in length from six months to five years.
But a number of gay rights advocates in the U.S. argue that even the one-year deferral period amounts to unnecessary discrimination.
“Some may believe this is a step forward, but in reality, requiring celibacy for a year is a de facto lifetime ban,” said the Gay Men’s Health Crisis (GMHC) is a statement. “Since the first days of epidemic, GMHC has witnessed first-hand how fear, stigma, and discrimination have fueled the spread of HIV. By implementing this policy, the FDA will continue to fan the flames of the outdated stereotype that HIV is only a ‘gay disease.’”









