Vol. XXV • Edition 7
STIs
January 2017
SU Election 2017
Nicole Drought Interview
Blood Donor: Selfless & Celibate
The new policy requires that men stay abstinent from sex Former UL student with men for a period Tomás Heneghan gave of one year before doblood for the eleventh nating. time last Monday un- “I was extremely deder new guidelines in- termined to donate so troduced by the Irish I essentially had choBlood Transfusion sen to stay sexually abService (IBTS). stinent since the end of In May 2015, Mr January 2015. Heneghan (25) was “I understand why given a permanent other men in my poblood donation ban sition might choose a after revealing to the less open path in doservice that he had had nating blood, but I felt sex with another man. I couldn’t do that. He then initiated a “For me - and I can High Court challenge only speak for my own against the IBTS’s poli- situation - it would feel cy of serving men who like I was ashamed of have ever had sex with having sex with a man men with the lifetime and that’s not someban. thing I’ll allow myself Mr Heneghan dropped to feel shame for,” Mr the challenge once plans Heneghan said. to introduce guidelines He said that his elevfor a 12-month deferral enth donation felt like were announced last the culmination of July. three years of “hard SARAH HYNES & EVIE KEARNEY
work, energy, a large degree of personal sacrifice.” Mr Heneghan could not describe it any better than “a sense of accomplishment” when giving blood as an openly gay man for the first time. “Making the appointment to donate in December, jumping through all the necessary hoops and then finally seeing the blood flow through the tube in my arm and into a small bag beside the bed in the clinic finally made the whole thing feel real,” he added. However, gay men are still forced to wait nine months longer than heterosexual men who have to abstain from sex for only three months. Homosexual men were originally banned from donating blood during the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the mid1980s. Mr Heneghan said: “A 12-month ban on men who’ve had oral or anal sex with another man should definitely either be removed or a three month ban imposed on all donors - the 12-month ban is quite clearly unnecessarily excessive and completely disproportionate.” HIV is detectable
three months after a possible exposure in both sexes. “It only takes one heterosexual man or woman who is HIV positive to donate blood and HIV could well then travel through the blood system,” Mr Heneghan continued. “I will continue to work my socks off and go down any avenue to make that easier and to bring about a situation where MSM (men who have sex with men) are not required to face such discriminatory and irrational policies as this 12-month deferral policy.” Irish blood reserves are currently at an alltime low and the demand for blood has never been higher in Ireland and the EU, ac-
cording to the IBTS. “I want to tell gay men to get out, roll up the sleeves and get donating. Ireland, and Europe, is running at an all-time low of regular blood donors,” Mr Heneghan said. “It’s an extraordinary gift to give a complete stranger and all you have to do to give this gift is lie in a bed for about 15 minutes, in a lot of cases, and let the blood flow. “You can save a life. It’s that simple really. One seemingly small act can actually save a life. It’s just a pinch in the arm and it’s over very quickly and from that another person’s life could be improved or even saved.” Health Minister Simon Harris welcomed the changes, which he
approved last June, that brings Ireland in line with similar policies in the UK and Canada. He explained that all deferral policies are continually under review. Mr Heneghan added: “I believe it is now past time that the Minister take action and review the operations of the Irish Blood Transfusion Service and initiate an independent and detailed review of the policies, activities and management of the service, including communication methods with donors, record management and policy formation. “The Minister has a responsibility to ensure the recipients of blood transfusions in Ireland are not being put at unnecessary risk.”