Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, 501 Smyth Road, K1H 8M2, Ottawa, Canada.
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 25;23(1):768. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15424-1.
Canada has incrementally reduced restrictions to blood and plasma donation that impact men who have sex with men, gay, bisexual, and queer men, and some Two Spirit, transgender and non-binary individuals (MSM/2SGBTQ+). Prior to the launch of a pilot program in 2021 enabling some MSM/2SGBTQ + to donate source plasma, we explored the acceptability of the program among individuals who could become eligible to donate in the program.
We invited men identifying as MSM/2SGBTQ + to participate in two consecutive semi-structured interviews to explore their views on blood and plasma donation policy, plasma donation, and the proposed Canadian plasma donation program. Interview transcripts were analyzed thematically and acceptability-related themes were mapped onto the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability.
Twenty-seven men identifying as having sex with men participated in 53 interviews. Eighteen themes were mapped onto the seven construct domains of the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability. Underlying all aspects of acceptability was a tension between four primary values influencing participants' views: altruism, equity, supply sufficiency, and evidence-based policy. The program was viewed as welcome progress on a discriminatory policy, with many excited to participate, yet tension with inequitable aspects of the program undermined support for the program and interest to contribute to it. The high demands of the program are unique for MSM/2SGBTQ + and are only tolerable as part of a program that is an incremental and instrumental step to more equitable donation policies.
Findings highlight past experiences of exclusion in Canada as a unique and critical part of the context of the donation experience among MSM/2SGBTQ+. Despite the program's goals of greater inclusivity of MSM/2SGBTQ + individuals, the anticipated experience of the program included continued stigmatization and inequities. Future research should seek to understand the experienced views of MSM/2SGBTQ + donors to ensure that as policies change, policies are implemented equitably.
加拿大逐步放宽了对男男性行为者、同性恋、双性恋和酷儿男性以及一些双灵人、跨性别和非二元性别个体(MSM/2SGBTQ+)的血液和血浆捐献限制。在 2021 年启动一项试点计划之前,该计划允许一些 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 捐献源血浆,我们在计划中可能有资格捐献的个人中探讨了该计划的可接受性。
我们邀请自认为是 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 的男性参加连续两次半结构化访谈,以探讨他们对血液和血浆捐献政策、血浆捐献以及拟议中的加拿大血浆捐献计划的看法。访谈记录进行了主题分析,并将与可接受性相关的主题映射到可接受性的理论框架上。
27 名自认为有性行为的男性参加了 53 次访谈。18 个主题被映射到可接受性理论框架的七个结构域。可接受性的所有方面都受到四个主要价值观的影响:利他主义、公平、供应充足和循证政策。该计划被视为对歧视性政策的可喜进展,许多人对此感到兴奋并愿意参与,但该计划与不公平方面的冲突削弱了对该计划的支持和对其做出贡献的兴趣。该计划对 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 的高要求是独一无二的,只有作为更公平的捐赠政策的渐进和工具性步骤的一部分,才能容忍这些要求。
研究结果强调了加拿大过去在排除 MSM/2SGBTQ+方面的经验,这是 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 捐赠经历背景中的一个独特而关键的部分。尽管该计划的目标是让更多的 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 个人参与,但预计该计划的实施将包括持续的污名化和不平等。未来的研究应该寻求理解 MSM/2SGBTQ+ 捐赠者的实际观点,以确保随着政策的变化,政策得到公平实施。