SJSU suspends blood drives, citing FDA ban on donations by gay men San Jose Mercury News ^ | 1/31/8 | Dana Hull
In a move believed to be the first by a college campus in the nation, San Jose State University President Don Kassing has suspended all campus blood drives because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration bars any man who has had sex with another man from donating blood.
"The FDA's lifetime blood donor deferral affecting gay men violates our non-discrimination policy," said Kassing in an e-mail sent to faculty, staff and students.
The suspension, which is effective immediately, applies to blood drives arranged by employees representing the university as well as blood drives organized by student groups.
The FDA's ban on blood donations by gay men has been in effect for years. The FDA says gay men are far more likely to be infected with HIV than the general population, and the agency has a duty to protect the nation's blood supply.
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