Canada's gay blood ban
NEWS / The struggle to end discrimination against gay men donating blood is far from over
Graeme Coleman / Toronto / Monday, January 02, 2012
Share |

In one of its radio ads, the Canadian Blood Services (CBS) asks, “Wouldn’t you hope someone was donating for you?”
 
In another, a voice states, “Blood, it’s in you to give.”
 
The “you” in the CBS ads still excludes gay men (at least those who have had sex with another man anytime since 1977).
        
Despite the recent lifting of a ban on men who have sex with men (MSM) donating blood in Britain, CBS and its counterpart, Héma-Québec, have committed only to a review of the current ban in Canada.
 
Most such bans were put in place in the early 1980s in response to the spread of HIV/AIDS.
 
Chad Smith, executive director of Winnipeg’s Rainbow Resource Centre, says the current policy is discriminatory and needs to be struck down.
 
“There are still a lot of trust issues with gay men in our society,” he says. “There are still a lot of stereotypes that gay men have HIV or spread HIV. The policy doesn’t target behaviour; it targets gay men.”
 
Smith says CBS offers no exceptions for gay men who are in healthy monogamous relationships for long periods of time, yet heterosexuals are not asked to divulge information about their sex lives. He says CBS targets sexual orientation and not sexual behaviour.
 
“Our own study of our donor base demonstrated that gender-neutral, behaviour-based screening resulted in an excessive loss of donors and would threaten supply. Therefore this method of screening cannot maintain the current levels of safety and adequacy of supply,” states Ron Vezina, director of communications of CBS, in an email to Xtra on Nov 28.
 
While Canadian statistics show that MSM still run the highest risk of contracting HIV, the technology used to screen and test blood is far more advanced today than it was when the original policy was adopted. 
 
Meanwhile, Public Health Agency of Canada research has found that HIV infection rates are on the rise in other groups, including aboriginals and immigrant groups from Africa and the Caribbean.
 
Fifteen percent of positive HIV test reports in Manitoba in 2007 and 20 percent of positive reports in Alberta were from people who identified as African-Canadian. In Ontario, 11 percent of all positive HIV test reports between 1985 and 2005 also fell into this category.
 
In response to scientific advancements, several countries, including Australia and Japan, have implemented deferral periods on donations from MSM.
 
CBS is currently considering a deferral period in Canada, although the final decision rests with Health Canada.
 
Vezina says CBS is looking at a deferral period of between five and 10 years. Vezina also noted that Canada’s history of tainted blood makes it more difficult to lift the ban.
        
Gay Manitoba business owner Jason Sarna, 41, recently ended a 13-year monogamous relationship. Sarna says he’s angry that because he’s gay he’s unable to donate what’s in him to give.
 
“The ban makes me feel dirty, like I am unworthy of donating my blood because I have, or will get, AIDS – when that isn’t the case,” says Sarna. “It’s frustrating because I pride myself on being healthy. I am one of the healthiest people I know, yet I am unable to donate my blood to people who need it. It just isn’t fair.”
 
The CBS ban on gay blood also has ripple effects beyond the gay community.
 
Jena Colpitts, a 22-year-old student at the University of Manitoba, is a heterosexual female who considered not donating blood because she, too, is angry that her gay friends are forbidden from donating.
 
“The policy reinforces the preconceived notion that men who have sex with men consistently engage in high-risk behaviour, regardless of their actual behaviour,” she says.
        
Despite how well MSM protect themselves, or whether they are in healthy monogamous relationships, Vezina feels the policy is necessary to mitigate the risk of tainted blood.
 
“A man who has had sex with another man is still participating in a high-risk activity,” he says.
        
Smith thinks the idea of a five-year deferral period is window dressing.
 
“Putting that in place just makes it look like they are negotiating with us, but realistically it won't change anything,” he says. “Any time-based ban is discriminatory. But if having some sort of a deferral period for men to donate blood is going to happen, it has to be a realistic period.”
 
Smith says a one-month deferral period would be more practical.
 
“It is something you can work into your lifestyle if you are in a relationship and sexually active.”
 
 
  


Share |


Reader Comments


 
# of partners not their gender
In Saint Lucia we have a gender nuetral policy - A person is excluded from doonating blood if they have had more then one sexual partner in the last 6 months, regardless of gender. Behaviour not orientation is the rule, this is a science and evidence based policy. It seems Canada needs to get with the programme
Dr marcus Day, Castries Saint Lucia
01/02/12 5:42 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Blood, it's in you to give...
Unless you're a filthy faggot.
Dan, Toronto ON
01/02/12 7:44 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Girls who fuck boys who fuck boys excluded also
Not only does the current policy exclude gay men from donating blood, it also excludes their female partners from donating since the policy states "You are a male who has had sex with another male, since 1977" followed by, "You have had sex with someone who has done any of the things listed above". What about the women that donate blood that don't know that their male partners currently or have in the past had sex with other men? Not everyone is forthcoming and honest in their relationships.
Keri, Toronto ON
01/02/12 8:39 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
That's the problem with using risk groups...
...rather than risk behaviours, as exclusion criteria. If you tell people they cannot donate unless they have been in a completely monogamous relationship and/or have consistently practiced safer sex and have not shared needles, then you don't have to worry about whom they have been having sex with. And such screening criteria will work just as well for any future blood/semen borne pathogen that comes along that may or may not be more prevalent among men who have sex with men than it is among heterosexuals, without unnecessarily excluding anyone who has not engaged in behaviours that put them at risk of infection.
Patrick, Toronto ON
01/02/12 9:45 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Tested?
Isn't all blood tested? I sure would hope so therefore straight or gay shouldn't make a different.
Dan, Vancouver Bc
01/02/12 10:32 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Who cares?
1)It's not like you have a human right to donate blood. 2)The latest research is showing that the rates of gay men contracting HIV is rising. I am a gay man and I never engage in anal sex at all. It grosses me out, but the bottom line (pardon the pun) is that as long as a large population of gay men continue to engage in high risk behaviors (anal sex) that expose them to HIV then a ban should be in place. We're a high risk group. It might not be far but if you want to blame someone blame all of the dumb asses acquiring / transmitting HIV through anal sex.
tim, Brandon MB
01/03/12 1:20 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
To Tim from Brandon Re: Who Cares
I don't think what you say is the right way to thinking. Saying anal sex is high risk behaviour is slightly ignorant and silly. Yes it's more sensitive there and fragile, but so long as you stay safe, you're not in a high risk behaviour. And the way you typed it almost makes it sound like, gay men having anal sex get HIV. That only happens if you actually have unprotected anal sex with someone HIV + and what's more you could say the same thing about a woman and man having unprotected sex, including potentially unprotected anal. So before you say something that in a way hurts your own community, think before posting....
Sean, London Ontario
01/03/12 11:38 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
It's Discrimination
Check out Saving Lives With Helpful Guys, we're fighting to end the ban in America. We have addressed many of the same issues this article raises. Our website is an educational resource center for policy directors, civil rights activists, students, members of the medical community, and the public at large who are dedicated to safely and sensibly reforming the Food and Drug Administration's Gay Blood Ban. http://SavingLivesWithHelpfulGuys.com
Kyle Carlson, Chicago Illinois, USA
01/06/12 12:12 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.