|| Health News ||
August 22, 2006
Australian man challenges Red Cross ban on gay male blood donors
A gay man from
the Australian state of Tasmania is challenging a ban on
blood donated by gay men who have been sexually active in
the last year. Michael Cain, 23, said at a hearing
before the Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Tribunal
today that the Red Cross Blood Service there should
accept donations from men who have had safe sex and not
categorically deny them the opportunity to give blood,
The Australian newspaper reports.
Although the nation's blood supply is currently
reaching dangerously low levels, with only a day and a
half of supplies left, the Red Cross defended its
discriminatory policy at the tribunal. The United States has
a similar discriminatory policy that goes even further and
bans donations from all gay men.
The tribunal's decision is expected to have
wide-ranging implications. "The Tasmanian tribunal
hearings will be watched carefully by governments and
health experts the world over," Rodney Croome of the
Tasmanian Gay and Lesbian Rights Group told The
Australian. (The Advocate)
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