FDA considers lifting ban on blood donations from gay and bisexual men

On Jan. 27, the FDA proposed easing restrictions for blood donations from gay and bisexual men. Photo courtesy of the Manchester City Library via Flickr.

By Sarah Grinnell ’26

Staff Writer

LGBTQ+ activists had reason to celebrate on Friday, Jan. 27, as the Food and Drug Administration initiated a proposal to change long-standing restrictions on gay and bisexual men’s blood donation, Smithsonian reported. According to an NBC News Article, this ban, which was first implemented during the AIDS crisis in the 1980s, prohibited any man who had had sex with at least one other man within three months of donation from giving blood.

The current draft of the proposal consists of what the New York Post describes as “gender-inclusive, individual risk-based questions,” which would make qualifications for donation dependent on sexual activity rather than orientation. This would measure the risk of HIV transmission equally against all identities, instead of targeting a single group or gender. As Smithsonian explained, in 1985 the FDA indefinitely banned any man who had sex with another man since 1977 from donating blood. The updated guidelines would mean anyone of any gender who has had only one sexual partner in the past three months is eligible to donate blood. 

According to Smithsonian, the FDA has said if the potential donors have engaged in anal sex, had a new sexual partner, or had more than one sexual partner within the last three months, they would be subject to questioning about their recent sexual activity and instructed to wait another three months before donating. The New York Post reported that these new guidelines are based on sexual practice, meaning that women will be impacted by donor restrictions for the first time. According to the New York Post, those in monogamous relationships will be eligible to donate blood regardless of sexual affiliation or gender. 

According to NBC, bans will remain in effect for people who have tested positive for HIV and take medication to treat it. Additionally, those taking oral medications to prevent infection, such as PrEP, must abide by a three month “deferral period” before they can donate, and those taking injectable PrEP would have to wait two years after their most recent injection before being permitted to give blood, Smithsoniam detailed. PrEP, which stands for pre-exposure prophylaxis, is a pill which prevents HIV from settling into the body before it can spread and is typically taken before sex or under other circumstances where infection could be likely, WebMD says.

The proposed guidelines have developed in part due to the drop-off in the number of blood donations seen at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Smithsonian said. With eased restrictions, the number of donors contributing to the national blood supply could increase significantly. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many blood centers have not had enough blood to last even two days, and one fifth of all blood centers have had a one day supply or less, Smithsonian explained. The new proposal hopes to amend this situation. A report from the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law found that lifts on donor bans for men who have sex with men would increase the annual blood supply by two to four percent.

Tony Morrison, a spokesperson for the LGBTQ+ advocacy group GLAAD, has commented on this development in an NPR report, saying, “[t]hese changes are 40-plus years in the making, and they’re a tremendous leap forward in elevating science over stigma.” 

However, for some, the guidelines still leave something to be desired — especially where the restrictions around PrEP are concerned. As Jose Abrigo, HIV project director for the advocacy group Lambda Legal points out in an AP News article, “[w]e must be conscious to not further stigmatize these safe sex practices and uplift individuals taking precautions.” Claudia Cohn, chief medical officer for the nonprofit Association for the Advancement of Blood and Biotherapies, echoed this statement in a Washington Post article, saying, “keeping the blood supply safe is paramount, but it is also important to move forward so that we are not excluding a group of donors who could be perfectly safe.” 

According to the New York Post, the responses to the proposal have been overwhelmingly positive, with many eagerly anticipating the fruition of FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf’s promise to “use the best science [to maintain] a safe and adequate supply of blood and blood products in the U.S.,” while preventing further discrimination against any “gender or sexual orientation.”

New FDA proposal hopes to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates

Johnson&Johnson COVID-19 vaccines at the Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, N.Y., March 3, 2021. Photo by Army Sgt. Sebastian Rothwyn, Army National Guard.

By Lily Benn ’24 

Staff Writer

On Jan. 26, 2023, the Food and Drug Administration of the United States held a meeting to discuss future plans for public health and the administration of COVID-19 vaccines. According to PBS NewsHour, the committee of 21 FDA members voted unanimously to approve the strategy of implementing an annual COVID-19 vaccination, allowing for people of all vaccination statuses to be vaccinated every year. This new system would no longer be dependent on keeping track of the number of primary vaccinations and boosters an individual has received, an article from AP News explains. The online committee meeting included information from an immunologist, Matthew Woodruff, who studies and publishes research on immune responses to COVID-19.

The AP News article goes on to state that while over 80 percent of Americans are vaccinated against COVID-19 with at least one dose, the newest Omicron variant booster approved in August 2022 has only reached about 16 percent of those eligible. As boosters become less popular among Americans, FDA scientists have supported a transition to an annual vaccination model, citing that many Americans have preexisting immunity from COVID-19 due to previous vaccination, infection or both. A news broadcast from WKMG News 6 ClickOrlando by Julie Broughton explains this news, but reports on counterpoints such as “critics” who believe that not enough data exists to sufficiently explain the higher immunity that the FDA has been using to back this new annual vaccination proposal.

This new system would go into effect once approved and backed by the Center for Disease Control, according to an article from PBS NewsHour. This new vaccine would likely be bivalent — or target multiple strains — as COVID-19 evolves. Thus, it would be able to target both the current dominant variant, Omicron, and further strains. Similar to the widely recognized influenza vaccine, it would be reevaluated each year and changed to target new mutations of the spike protein, the article explains.

According to a timeline put out by Mayo Clinic, vaccines targeting various influenza viruses have had a similar history, where pandemics and outbreaks led to widely recognized annual vaccines recommended for the general public. Influenza pandemics occurred in 1918, 1957 and 1958, 1968, the 1970s, and 2009, according to Mayo Clinic. The first introduction of an influenza vaccine recommendation was made in 1960 by the U.S. Public Health Service for people who were at high risk of influenza complications. By 1968, researchers began the development of specific influenza strain vaccines as a new pandemic spread. The article cites that the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a part of the CDC, introduced a recommendation in 2010 that all people aged 6 months and older be vaccinated against influenza annually. By 2019 and 2020, Mayo Clinic reports that annual influenza vaccines have prevented about 7.5 million infections and illnesses. 

According to AP News, the FDA hopes that their new vaccine implementation strategy will increase vaccination rates worldwide, as this strategy would both simplify information and increase health for the general public.

Mauna Loa volcano in Hawai‘i erupts for the first time in 38 years

Mauna Loa volcano in Hawai‘i erupts for the first time in 38 years

On Nov. 27, 2022, residents of the Hawaiian Islands were alerted of an impending volcano eruption. Approximately an hour later, lava began to flow from Mauna Loa for the first time in 38 years, The New York Times reported. “Mauna Loa,” which is Hawaiian for “Long Mountain,” is one of the world’s most active volcanoes, according to a report from the U.S. Geological Survey. The volcano stretches over half of the Island of Hawai‘i and measures around 10.6 miles tall, the report said. According to the report, Mauna Loa’s first “well-documented historical eruption” was in 1843, and it has since erupted 33 times, most recently in 1984.

World population surpasses eight billion people

World population surpasses eight billion people

On Nov. 15, 2022, as projected by The United Nations, Earth’s population reached eight billion, approximately 11 years after the global population reached seven billion. According to The New York Times, the global population growth rate is expected to slow in the next few decades. Countries like the U.S. and China are expected to have lower growth rates, while poorer countries are expected to grow faster, with India predicted to become the world’s most populous nation in 2023.

Weather outlooks for this winter include warmer-than-usual temperatures

Weather outlooks for this winter include warmer-than-usual temperatures

Nov. 15, 2022, was the first snow of the season for students at Mount Holyoke College. Despite the early snow shower, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that this winter will see “drier-than-average conditions across the South with wetter-than-average conditions for areas of the Ohio Valley, Great Lakes, northern Rockies and Pacific Northwest.”

NASA prepares for future Artemis missions with Orion spacecraft

NASA prepares for future Artemis missions with Orion spacecraft

At 8:40 a.m. EST on Nov. 26, 2022, Artemis 1 mission’s uncrewed Orion spacecraft officially set the record for flying the furthest distance compared to any previous spacecraft designed to carry humans, outperforming the 1970 Apollo 13, an Engadget article reported.

New bivalent COVID booster recieves less attention than previous vaccines

New bivalent COVID booster recieves less attention than previous vaccines

As we approach nearly three years of social distancing, mask mandates and Zoom meetings, Americans appear more than ready to leave COVID-19 in the past, an MSN article reported. But the article’s documentation of the low numbers of those receiving the new booster and the concerns these statistics could pose for another surge suggest that the danger of COVID-19 may not be gone from the United States.

New website provides sexual and reproductive health resources

New website provides sexual and reproductive health resources

From its inception, Our Bodies Ourselves has been a resource for women and gender expansive individuals to gain information regarding their physical health. Originally created in the late 1960s due to a lack of knowledge on cisgender women’s bodies, it’s now more relevant than ever in the fight for control over reproductive and sexual choices.