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Chris Steel hasn’t relaxed in a donor lounge chair for many years.
He described his last interaction with Red Cross Australia as “having to come out all over again” when they asked him to donate.
“I had to explain, unfortunately, I can’t donate because I’m gay,” he shared with SBS News.
“It’s a conversation that you’d rather not have. It’s challenging to address.”
Steel, who serves as the ACT treasurer, has long campaigned for the inclusion of gay and bisexual men in blood donation services.

He expresses relief that this source of frustration has been alleviated for many individuals.

From Monday, most gay and bisexual men, those using pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and transgender women will be able to donate plasma nationwide, even if they’d had sex with men in the previous three months, as long as they meet all other eligibility criteria.

Lifeblood Australia projects that this policy shift will impact 600,000 Australians, potentially increasing the donor pool by 24,000 and resulting in 95,000 additional plasma donations.

Ban rooted in HIV transmission fears

Skye McGregor, an epidemiologist whose work focuses on surveillance and prevention of sexually transmissible infections and blood-borne viruses at the Kirby Institute at the University of NSW, said the ban stems from the 1980s.
She said fears over transmitting HIV through blood transfusions prompted an urgent health response from Australia and many other countries around the world.
“Australia introduced an indefinite deferral for men who have sex with men, and this because they’re the population who’ve historically been most impacted by HIV,” she told SBS News.
“There was a three-month or more delay between someone acquiring HIV and a test being able to detect it.

“As HIV testing has advanced, the deferral period for men who have sex with men was reduced from indefinite to 12 months, and then in 2021, it was further shortened to three months.”

A man in a blue t-shirt and a white bandage around his elbow stands in the centre of a blood donation bank.

First-time donor Johannes felt frustrated that he was unable to donate for years. Source: SBS News / Rania Yallop

Steel is excited to witness the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) provide a safe pathway for donating the liquid gold and hopes to encourage thousands to donate.

“Gay men are just as altruistic as anyone else,” Steel said.

“They want to help others, and they’ve been prevented from doing so; that changes today, and it’s really great to see this step forward for equality.”

The service is also working on changes to eligibility for blood and platelet donations after the TGA approved a submission to remove gender-based sexual activity rules.
Under those changes, all donors will be asked the same questions about their sexual activity, regardless of their gender or sexuality.

All donors with new or multiple partners will be prohibited from proceeding if they’ve had anal sex in the last three months.

Rolling up their sleeves a ‘step towards equity’

Since hearing about the rules update, 26-year-old Canberran Ben, who did not give his last name, has been recruiting friends to roll up their sleeves.
Ben arrived before 9am to be one of the first donors at the launch event on Monday. He said he found the previous guidelines “a little bit unfair”.

“It’s a step towards equity and I think it’s a reasonable sacrifice to make,” he told SBS News.

Two men are sitting at a table, with milkshakes and plates in front of them.

Following the rule change, Ben (right) has already enlisted six of his friends to donate plasma. Source: SBS News / Rania Yallop

Ben was accompanied by Johannes, who works in a Canberra hospital and was motivated to add to the plasma supply after seeing the impact on recipients first-hand.

“I’m at the giving side of blood products, and I know how life-saving it can be to have them, whether that’s plasma or red blood cells,” Johannes said.

‘Felt braver’: Life-changing plasma

Hayley Teasdale cannot put into words the impact of two small vials of plasma.

For years, a rare primary immune deficiency left her unwell, bedridden and frequently visiting the hospital.

A woman in a dark pink blouse, holding up a vial of plasma as she speaks to another woman.

Hayley Teasdale uses two vials of plasma a week, the equivalent of 100 plasma donations, to boost her immunocompromised body. Source: SBS News / Rania Yallop

Now, the equivalent of 100 plasma donations a year, has meant she can live a full and active lifestyle and keep up with her three-year-old daughter.

Teasdale received her first dose of plasma at the age of 24 and described it as “life-changing”.
“I felt braver to go out in public spaces.
“I could deal with getting sick now, because I had the support of someone else’s immune system, essentially, and that was very powerful.”

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