Medicine Hat News

Canadian Blood Services eyes removing sexual orientatio­n-based donation restrictio­ns

- NICOLE THOMPSON

If Jason Goncalves has to answer detailed questions about his sex life in order to donate blood plasma, he’ll grit his teeth and do it.

Never mind that heterosexu­al men don’t face the same inquiries, including whether they are in a monogamous relationsh­ip.

Goncalves said he’s just happy to be allowed to give blood plasma — something he hadn’t done since he was in high school because of a ban on blood donations from gay and bisexual men who are sexually active with other men.

“It’s odd to me how prehistori­c the rules still are,” the 33-year-old from London, Ont., said. “But it does feel pretty amazing to actually be able to know that I’m contributi­ng to possibly helping other people’s lives.”

Goncalves was allowed to make his donation as part of a pilot project by Canadian Blood Services that began recently in London and Calgary.

It grants men who have sex with men the chance to donate their plasma, so long as they and their partner have been monogamous for the past three months.

Elsewhere in the country, men who have sex with men can donate blood or plasma only if they have abstained from sex for at least three months.

Canadian Blood Services is working to update those rules and plans to submit a request to Health Canada later this year to abandon time-based requiremen­ts for gay and bisexual men.

“We recognize it isn’t ideal to be asking gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men questions that aren’t asked of other donors,” it said.

“That’s one of the reasons Canadian Blood Services will make a submission to Health Canada by the end of 2021 to use sexual behaviour-based screening for all donors.”

For now, the pilot project is a small step forward.

It imposes a 60-day hold on plasma donated by sexually active gay and bisexual men. The donor then has to return and donate again, and the first donation will only be used if both samples pass screenings for pathogens, such as HIV and hepatitis — which all donations are tested for.

If the donor doesn’t return within nine months of their first donation, Canadian Blood Services said, Health Canada requires that the plasma be tossed. Other donors aren’t subject to that same requiremen­t.

Many criteria can affect a person’s ability to donate blood or plasma, such as the use of some prescripti­on drugs and having recently received a piercing. But Goncalves said the strictures for men who have sex with men are rooted in inaccurate stereotype­s that gay men are promiscuou­s.

“I’m just really confused as to how a man who has maybe slept with 100 women in the last month — unprotecte­d or not, they don’t even ask that question because they don’t care — it’s OK to donate blood and their blood will get used straight away,” he said.

The pilot project only deals with plasma — the part of blood that carries nutrients, which when separated from the rest of the blood is a wheatcolou­red viscous fluid.

In some cases, Canadian Blood Services says, parts of the plasma are used to create drugs for people with burns, bleeding disorders and immune deficienci­es. In other cases, patients with conditions such as liver failure and severe infections receive plasma transfusio­ns.

The restrictio­ns on donations from gay men have prompted fierce backlash given that Canadian Blood Services has said there’s always a need for plasma.

The agency and its regulator, Health Canada, cite the higher proportion of HIV among gay men as the reason for the stricter rules.

Data from the Public Health Agency of Canada from 2018 suggests half of the roughly 62,000 Canadians living with HIV were men who have sex with other men.

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