
«Screen the blood, not the sexuality» – End gay restrictions
Ahead of next week’s World Blood Donor Day 2018, Wednesday 14 June, Peter Tatchell Foundation are issuing a challenge to governments and blood services worldwide:«Screen the blood, not the sexuality».
A surge of press reports (The Economist, ABC, The Mirror) refer to a shortage of blood supplies in blood banks the world over. And yet existing restrictions in over 40 countries, including in the UK, prevent sexually active gay and bisexual men from donating blood either indefinitely or for a lengthy period of time after they last had sex with a man – even if they practice safe sex within a monogamous relationship.
Similar donor restrictions rarely apply to heterosexual people who have multiple partners and engage in risky sex without a condom.
In a bid to raise awareness about the outmoded and medically unjustified blanket restrictions on gay and bisexual men, the Peter Tatchell Foundation, with the help of advertising agency McCann London has launched a campaign with the message «Screen the blood, not the sexuality».
They created «The Gaydr» – a pseudo «gay detector» device – which we used to scan heterosexual men on their way to a blood bank in central London, in order to make them feel the same sense of exclusion experienced by sexually active gay and bisexual men in many countries. The spoof Gaydr scan informed them that they were actually gay and not allowed to donate blood.