|
 |
| |
|
|
|
Question:
Our
campus is looking for more information regarding blood drives
on campus. What are some actions options and details about
the Red Cross Policy?
Answer:
Overview
Using FDA guidelines, the Red Cross Blood
Donation Eligibility Guidelines explicitely exclude men who
have sex with men anytime since 1977 from donating blood.
This screening process goes against some university's anti-discrimination
policy and continues to label AIDS and HIV as a gay men's
disease.
Actions
- Provide stickers to people that show the
Red Cross logo and state "This should not be a symbol of
discrimination." Or stickers that say "Be nice to me. I
can't donate." and "Be nice to me. I don't discriminate."
that are similar to the ones given out to those who are
able to donate.
- Find HIV Negative gay and bi men. Get their
blood types, especially if you can find some A/B RH Neg
types, and ask them to send in signed letters to your local
Red Cross telling them what blood they are not getting due
to the ban.
- Student groups can educate the general public
right outside each blood drive, telling the public of the
importance of donating blood, but also giving information
about the FDA ban and numbers they could call to voice concern.
- Hold an Anti-Blood Drive where those people
who are excluded from giving blood because of "that question"
could be counted and tallied to make the local blood collection
group aware of who they were missing.
- Wear stickers that say "Hug me - I can't
give blood because the Red Cross discriminates."
- Those who could give blood can be
encouraged to do so and to let folks know at the blood bank
(with stickers and conversation) that they were giving blood
in the name of someone who could not because they were discriminated
against due to the Red Cross policy.
Red
Cross Blood Donation Eligibility Guidelines
HIV,
AIDS
Those who are at increased risk for becoming
infected with HIV are not eligible to donate blood. According
to the Food and Drug Administration, you are at increased
risk if:
- you are a male who has had sex with another
male since 1977, even once;
- you have ever used a needle, even once,
to take drugs or steroids that were not prescribed by a
physician;
- Student groups can educate the general public
right outside each blood drive, telling the public of the
importance of donating blood, but also giving information
about the FDA ban and numbers they could call to voice concern.
- you were born in or lived in Cameroon, Central
African Republic, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon,
Niger, or Nigeria since 1977 (This requirement is related
to concerns about HIV Group O.)
- you have taken drugs or money in exchange
for sex since 1977;
- you have ever had a positive test for HIV
virus;
- you have symptoms of HIV infection including
unexplained weight loss, night sweats, blue or purple spots
on or under the skin, long-lasting white spots or unusual
sores in your mouth, lumps in your neck, armpits, or groin
that last more than a month, fever higher than 99 degrees
that lasts more than 10 days, diarrhea lasting over a month,
or persistent cough and shortness of breath;
|
|
© 2005 National Consortium of Directors
of LGBT Resources in Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Privacy policy: We do not automatically collect any information about our visitors that is personally identifiable, but we do automatically collect other information. Examples of this include the type of internet browser you are using, the type ofcomputer operating system you use, and the domain name of the site from which you linked over to our site. This helps us to make sure our site is accessible to our visitors and helps us to better understand how they reached this site. |
 |
|