From the San Jose Mercury News:
Last month, Harbor High School in Santa Cruz held its annual blood drive with the American Red Cross. After volunteering for hours, student body president Ronnie Childers waited in line to donate his own blood.
He was turned away.
Ronnie is gay, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration bars any boy or man who has had sex with another man since 1977 from donating blood. The FDA says gay men are far more likely to be infected with HIV than the general population, so the agency has a duty to protect the nation’s blood supply.
Ronnie’s experience inflamed the Harbor High School community and has reignited an ongoing debate about the FDA’s policy. The fact that gay men are prohibited from donating blood — regardless of their sexual activity, safe-sex practices or HIV status — has rankled the gay community for years. But the American Red Cross and other national organizations that regularly run blood drives are also pushing the FDA to revise the policy, which has been in place since AIDS first hit in the early 1980s.
Both the disease and the process by which blood is screened have evolved dramatically in the past 25 years. HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, is increasingly transmitted between heterosexuals.
Women now account for more than one-quarter of all new HIV and AIDS diagnoses in the United States, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And blood banks are using new screening technology that identifies the virus at an early stage of infection.
“The government is not prepared to deal with the changing climate of the AIDS epidemic,” said Chris Weber, development director at the Billy DeFrank LGBT Community Center in San Jose.
High school students contribute 8 percent of the blood the American Red Cross collects in Northern California, and many blood banks have launched ad campaigns to encourage 17- to 24-year-olds to become lifelong donors. At the same time, though, a new generation of openly gay high school and college students is questioning and protesting what they say is a discriminatory policy. Continue reading ‘Gay Teen can’t donate blood; high schoolers get pissed.’












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