I’ve been an infrequent blood donor for years.
The needle scared me off until empty pockets in Greece in 1976 overcame that fear. In Athens twice I earned what I recall as the equivalent of 12 pounds sterling per extraction. The attendant joked with us that Greeks held parties to get high on hippies’ blood.
From then on I donated here though I still don’t look at the needle.
Then in the early 1990s I was engaged as a lawyer by the Ministry of Health on the restructuring of blood transfusion services. It followed a Hepatitis C scandal.
A French Minister was convicted for allowing risky blood to be used. In New Zealand culpability was never clarified. Some of it occurred on H Clark’s watch as Minister of Health though neither she nor any other Minister may have known enough to be in the gun. Haemophiliacs mainly paid the tragic price for casualness about blood borne diseases.
My job was to develop the legal structure for a new nationally coordinated service, and to negotiate contracts with CSL of Australia and other foreign suppliers. As lawyers do, I learned a lot along the way about blood services, products and risks.
Our ability to draw from a purely donated domestic supply is a powerful protection for New Zealanders.
I vividly remember one of the most qualified directors reminding a meeting that blood transfusions were inherently dangerous, and we should design the service to use as little as possible. "There is so much we still do not know about what is transmitted, and latencies" he said, before mad cow disease turned the British beef industry upside down.
A month ago I was told my last donation would be used only for plasma, not red cell transfusion, because in my household there’d been a severe stomach upset a week earlier.
So i was specially interested when people at the Rainbow forum last week asked candidates to stop blood services from distinguishing between gay donors and others.
I respect their wish to give blood. Our voluntary system depends on altruism. But it appears this issue is now used by some gay activists to sniff out those they call "homophobes".
I did not then realise the significance of the probing. Now I know the background.
The New Zealand Blood Service is now proposing to move further away from the total "no thank you" policy recently reaffirmed by the UK and the US. I hope it is driven purely by NZBS views of best practice for patients, and not by fear of seeming unfashionable. It is not a good sign that NZBS’ introduction makes more of the involvement of a QC than the medical authority of the authors.
The AIDS Foundation in a handy paper has described the new policies as likely to "…position New Zealand as having one of the least restrictive [donor] deferral criteria in the world…"
It appeared that was not enough for many at the Forum, and the candidates seemed happy to encourage them.
My approach was simple. In blood safety matters the interests of the innocent recipients come first, second and third. And without perfect knowledge and perfect screening tests safety is governed by probability assessments. A wish to donate blood is not a right. If we have enough blood from lower risk people then do not take any from higher risk donors.
Screening tests will not necessarily pick up blood infection in a latency period after infection but before the sufferer is aware.
Some who’ve been in the UK during the incubation period for mad cow disease have grizzled about rejection as donors.
Tough – the interests of helpless sick people must come ahead of any donor’s desire to feel virtuous.
So I was amazed when the ACT, Green and Labour candidates all assured the Rainbow forum of support for eliminating the "discrimination".
The Labour candidate was effusive, though to be fair it was hard at the end to know exactly what he’d said.
Nevertheless he was not pressed for clarification. The audience must have been content.
Stephen, I wonder if your above comment will also make you a homophobe in the eyes of the lunatic fringe of the homosexual and political movement.
I hope that others who read your post take note of what NZ Blood Services have to say in their review. Over 1000 Canadians became infected with HIV due to pressure from the homosexual lobby. A reduction from 10 to 5 years does not seem unreasonable but if there is political pressure to change further to make some zealots feel good it should strongly be resisted.
The reason ACT is polling badly is due to a large extent to the party being taken over libertarian ideologues. They should make up their mind whether their economic policies or their loopy libertarian ideas to have priority.
The fact that 2% of the population account for 82% of HIV infection acquired in New Zealand should show that homosexual should not be offering advise on sexual health matters.