As the rules have changed for gay people to give blood, I have gone back to wondering why people treated with insulin are not able to give blood.
All the information I can find suggests that there is concern about "insulin levels" for the donor.
I can kind of think of an explanation of this for those on MDI where the amount of slow acting insulin could be affected when blood is taken.
However, for those of us with insulin pumps only using fast acting insulin which we are able to adjust easily, I wonder whether the blanket ban is valid or whether the Blood Bank has not caught up with recent diabetes treatments.
Or whether I have completely misunderstood the reasons why we cannot donate blood, especially as I have donated blood for diabetes research.
As much as I would like to donate blood, I am mostly curious to understand what would happen if I did.
Does anyone know more than "concern for insulin levels"or what this even means?
All the information I can find suggests that there is concern about "insulin levels" for the donor.
I can kind of think of an explanation of this for those on MDI where the amount of slow acting insulin could be affected when blood is taken.
However, for those of us with insulin pumps only using fast acting insulin which we are able to adjust easily, I wonder whether the blanket ban is valid or whether the Blood Bank has not caught up with recent diabetes treatments.
Or whether I have completely misunderstood the reasons why we cannot donate blood, especially as I have donated blood for diabetes research.
As much as I would like to donate blood, I am mostly curious to understand what would happen if I did.
Does anyone know more than "concern for insulin levels"or what this even means?
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