Are We Heading Towards Another...
Politics29 mins ago
I recently applied to join the register and was shocked to find on the back page of the leaflet,
"Do not register as a blood stem donor or consent to further matching tests if: (amongst other thing)
You are a man who has had sex with another man, even if "safe sex" using a condom or other protection."
So it's ok if you have been having unprotected sex with anyone and everyone, so long as you are straight! Cause if you have had a homosexual relationship, you must have something dodgy!!
No best answer has yet been selected by mycatis. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.After being infected with HIV, the body takes on average 3 months to develop antibodies, which is what is detected by a 'normal' HIV test, so technically you cannot be 100% sure that someone doesn't have HIV. The test done with blood screening can pick up the infection quicker, but still not until about 2 weeks after infection. Of course, that counts for hetero- as well as homosexual people. However, they can't ban everyone who has ever had any sex from donating blood, but homosexual men are one of the major risk groups for HIV and the blood services do have a duty to protect recipients as much as they can. The NBS also prohibits people (male or female) who have had sex in the past 12 months with someone from an African nation, as they are another major risk group.
A lot of gay groups think that the ban on blood donation is discriminatory, and I personally think they have a point. Surely a person who wants to give blood is likely to be the decent honest kind of person who would not lie about recent sexual encounters which could put the recipient at risk. I think they should just have a 12 month ban after 'risky sex', as they do for bisexual women who have had sex with a gay man.
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From the FAQ section of their website....
Sexuality in itself does not preclude you from joining the Register. However, The ANT has a responsibility to ensure individuals joining the register are aware of the importance of excluding themselves from the register if they know they could be at risk of transmitting a blood borne disease to a patient.
It is vital that they minimise the risks of transferring disease from donor to patient and there are strict regulations relating to donor selection resulting in a number of groups of people having to be excluded from donation, either temporarily or permanently. This includes individuals who have participated in an activity that may have put them at higher risk than usual of acquiring such an infection. Specific health population studies have identified a number of behaviours that increase risk and one of these is men who have sex with men.
Whilst all donors provide a sample of blood for testing for transmissible diseases before the donation, this sample has to be tested prior to the patient undergoing the necessary conditioning treatment and this creates an unavoidable "window" between the donor's blood sample being tested and the actual donation - a time during which a donor could become infected with a blood borne disease; repeating the blood test at the time of donation would be too late as the patient would, by then be fully conditioned, leaving him/her with no immune system and potentially totally vulnerable.
This would also apply to people who inject non-prescriptive drugs and provide sex in return for money or drugs.
I am not certain though, how, heterosexual relationships differ greatly in this respect and as mentioned above.
All the gay men I know are far more promiscuous and engage in far more ... shall we say 'unusual' ;o).... sexual practices than my straight friends.
It doesn't make them bad people, and I'm not saying that all gay men are like it, but would argue that the majority are.
So statistically, they have to enforce some control. As mentioned it applies to travellers and tattoo's as well, so I don't think it's part of any great gay conspiracy.