Chicago Sun-Times

Blood banks look to end shortages, build trust under proposed new donation rules

FDA announces new draft guidelines that would end abstinence period for gay, bisexual men

- BY ILANA AROUGHETI, STAFF REPORTER iarougheti@suntimes.com | @ilana_arougheti

As the Food and Drug Administra­tion expands eligibilit­y for male blood donors who have sex with men, Chicagolan­d hospitals and blood banks hope the local donor pool will grow.

The FDA announced draft guidelines Friday that would eliminate a mandatory three-month abstinence period before gay and bisexual men donate blood. Instead, all potential donors will fill out a questionna­ire about recent sexual behavior.

The need for blood donation in Chicago is constant, said Geoffrey Wool, Medical Director of UChicago Medicine’s Blood Donation Center.

“Our overall goal is a safe and robust blood supply for UChicago Medicine patients and those nationwide,” Wool said. “We believe today’s announceme­nt is a positive step in that direction.”

The proposal is based on an FDA study of 1,600 gay and bisexual men, the Associated Press reported. The survey measured sexual behavior questionna­ires against the current abstinence rule.

Both were found effective in preventing HIV transmissi­on through donated blood.

Chicagolan­d area blood banks and hospitals have known a change could be coming as the FDA pursued their study, said Glenn Ramsey, medical director of the blood bank at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital.

Nonprofit blood centers across the country have been unanimous in pushing for the change, said ImpactLife vice president Amanda Hess. ImpactLife provides donor blood to hospitals in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and Wisconsin.

“As an industry, we understand that the current deferral is not gender inclusive and has been seen as discrimina­tory,” Hess said. “We have a lot to learn.”

Gay and bisexual men won’t be able to give blood right away, Hess said. The FDA will collect feedback from blood banks nationwide before releasing a final version of the new guidelines.

The University of Chicago Medical Center expects to be able to implement new donor rules in about six months, Wool said.

Tim Wang, director of advocacy at Howard Brown Health, said he hopes the new eligibilit­y survey will account for queer men who have multiple sexual partners or take the HIV prevention drug PrEP, but remain low-risk for HIV.

“The need for a robust blood supply is paramount and we should not be turning away any qualified donors,” Wang said.

Gay and bisexual men in America were banned from giving blood at all starting in the 1980s. The FDA revised its protocol in 2015 to allow donation after one year of abstinence, then shortened it again to three months in 2020.

Gerald Harmon, a former president of the American Medical Associatio­n, published a letter in January 2022 calling abstinence periods discrimina­tory. When restrictio­ns were enacted, HIV transmissi­on was poorly understood, he wrote.

While there’s no way to know exactly how many new donors the policy change will bring in, gay and bisexual men across Chicagolan­d have expressed interest in donating blood in the past, Ramsey said.

“When donors have been told they’ve been deferred, it becomes a huge issue for recruitmen­t, for blood banks to reach out to them again and say, ‘you’re eligible now,’” Ramsey said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Food and Drug Administra­tion has proposed new guidelines for blood donations.
GETTY IMAGES FILES The Food and Drug Administra­tion has proposed new guidelines for blood donations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States