Post by RS Davis on Jul 22, 2004 22:39:20 GMT -5
Unnecessary regulations are making blood banks run dry.
Caroline Waters
If you walked into a blood donation center before the HIV crisis, you would have been asked 15 quick questions, then either accepted as a donor or not. Today those questions have burgeoned to almost 50, and the list continues to grow.
The extra caution stems from a colossal error that blood bank officials made two decades ago, when they ignored the early warning signs of HIV and failed to implement appropriate screening and cleaning procedures. As a result, America’s blood supply became contaminated and 20,000 people were infected with the deadly virus. It’s no surprise that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has decided to take no further chances. But its efforts to prevent another HIV fiasco may create a different sort of disaster: a blood supply that is extremely safe but too small to meet the nation’s needs.
In response to recent outbreaks of such illnesses as SARS, West Nile virus, and the human form of mad cow disease (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease), the FDA is forcing blood banks to follow rules that substantially increase the odds that a donor will be rejected. Safety experts consider many of these rules, known as deferrals, nonsensical, and they warn that the restrictions are reducing the donor base so drastically that hospitals would not have enough blood in the event of a large-scale crisis.
[shadow=red,left,300]Blood Simple[/shadow]
One of the most disparaged restrictions on donors is called the European deferral, which is aimed at reducing the risk that Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease will enter the U.S. blood supply. To date, there is no conclusive evidence that the disease can be transmitted via blood, although the FDA argues that studies have shown it is theoretically possible. The mandate bars donors who lived in the U.K. for three months or more between 1980 and 1996 or in Europe for six months or more from 1980 to 1990. Other restrictions exclude people who have had a headache with fever in the previous week; men who have had sexual relations with other men since 1977; women who have had sex with a man who has had sex with another man since 1977; people who have experienced angina in the previous year; and anyone who has received a tattoo in the previous year.
The rules have produced no shortage of critics. One is Arthur Caplan, a University of Pennsylvania medical ethicist who until last year served on the FDA’s Blood Supply Advisory Committee. "The blood shortage is the worst challenge the health system faces in terms of doing without a key biological resource," he says. "It grows worse every day as demand continues to rise and supply stays stable."
Caplan argues that the FDA could relax some of the restrictions, thus increasing the number of qualified donors. "What possible reason would we have to defer donors who have not converted to AIDS since 1977?" he asks. "The disease has no such incubation period. Moreover, we can reliably detect anyone exposed to HIV within a year after the exposure." He suggests that instead of disqualifying those people forever, asking them not to donate for three years after engaging in risky behavior would achieve the same level of safety.
Caplan also believes deferring donors from the U.K. or Europe does not square with the evidence about the role played by blood transfusion in transmitting mad cow disease. "If it could be transmitted that way," he asks, "then why did it not appear all over the blood supply in the U.K.?"
Louis M. Katz, medical director of the Mississippi Valley Regional Blood Center in Davenport, Iowa, and president of America’s Blood Centers, which supplies half the nation’s blood, estimates that blood centers around the country have lost 5 percent to 10 percent of their donors as a result of the new FDA rules. He says the higher estimate applies if you include the people who don’t even try to donate because they’ve heard about the deferrals. He adds that the rules have had an especially noticeable impact in cities such as New York, where a substantial proportion of the blood supply historically came from European donors or from donors with extensive travel to or residence in Europe.
[shadow=red,left,300]Continued...[/shadow]
Caroline Waters
If you walked into a blood donation center before the HIV crisis, you would have been asked 15 quick questions, then either accepted as a donor or not. Today those questions have burgeoned to almost 50, and the list continues to grow.
The extra caution stems from a colossal error that blood bank officials made two decades ago, when they ignored the early warning signs of HIV and failed to implement appropriate screening and cleaning procedures. As a result, America’s blood supply became contaminated and 20,000 people were infected with the deadly virus. It’s no surprise that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has decided to take no further chances. But its efforts to prevent another HIV fiasco may create a different sort of disaster: a blood supply that is extremely safe but too small to meet the nation’s needs.
In response to recent outbreaks of such illnesses as SARS, West Nile virus, and the human form of mad cow disease (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease), the FDA is forcing blood banks to follow rules that substantially increase the odds that a donor will be rejected. Safety experts consider many of these rules, known as deferrals, nonsensical, and they warn that the restrictions are reducing the donor base so drastically that hospitals would not have enough blood in the event of a large-scale crisis.
[shadow=red,left,300]Blood Simple[/shadow]
One of the most disparaged restrictions on donors is called the European deferral, which is aimed at reducing the risk that Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease will enter the U.S. blood supply. To date, there is no conclusive evidence that the disease can be transmitted via blood, although the FDA argues that studies have shown it is theoretically possible. The mandate bars donors who lived in the U.K. for three months or more between 1980 and 1996 or in Europe for six months or more from 1980 to 1990. Other restrictions exclude people who have had a headache with fever in the previous week; men who have had sexual relations with other men since 1977; women who have had sex with a man who has had sex with another man since 1977; people who have experienced angina in the previous year; and anyone who has received a tattoo in the previous year.
The rules have produced no shortage of critics. One is Arthur Caplan, a University of Pennsylvania medical ethicist who until last year served on the FDA’s Blood Supply Advisory Committee. "The blood shortage is the worst challenge the health system faces in terms of doing without a key biological resource," he says. "It grows worse every day as demand continues to rise and supply stays stable."
Caplan argues that the FDA could relax some of the restrictions, thus increasing the number of qualified donors. "What possible reason would we have to defer donors who have not converted to AIDS since 1977?" he asks. "The disease has no such incubation period. Moreover, we can reliably detect anyone exposed to HIV within a year after the exposure." He suggests that instead of disqualifying those people forever, asking them not to donate for three years after engaging in risky behavior would achieve the same level of safety.
Caplan also believes deferring donors from the U.K. or Europe does not square with the evidence about the role played by blood transfusion in transmitting mad cow disease. "If it could be transmitted that way," he asks, "then why did it not appear all over the blood supply in the U.K.?"
Louis M. Katz, medical director of the Mississippi Valley Regional Blood Center in Davenport, Iowa, and president of America’s Blood Centers, which supplies half the nation’s blood, estimates that blood centers around the country have lost 5 percent to 10 percent of their donors as a result of the new FDA rules. He says the higher estimate applies if you include the people who don’t even try to donate because they’ve heard about the deferrals. He adds that the rules have had an especially noticeable impact in cities such as New York, where a substantial proportion of the blood supply historically came from European donors or from donors with extensive travel to or residence in Europe.
[shadow=red,left,300]Continued...[/shadow]