Liias bill to expand blood donation options to 16- and 17-year-olds approved by the House
OLYMPIA – A bill to expand eligibility for a certain type of blood donation to 16- and 17-year-olds was unanimously approved by the House on Wednesday.
SB 5179, sponsored by State Sen. Marko Liias (D-Everett) would allow people ages 16 and 17 to donate blood through the apheresis process with parental or guardian permission.
Under current law, 16- and 17-year-olds can donate whole blood with parental or guardian permission, however they cannot donate blood through the process known as apheresis, which is used for platelet donations.
“Every two seconds in the United States, someone needs blood or platelets. And because of the COVID-19 pandemic, our nation’s blood supply has faced critical shortages and has been pushed to the brink.” [TVW Link]
Liias was inspired to introduce this legislation after hearing the story of one of his constituents, Grace Griffin from Lynnwood.
“At 16, I was deferred from donating platelets in Washington, which made me sad, but I was inspired to change that because I truly believe this can do good,” said Griffin during the committee public hearing. “I have seen platelet donations do good. My late grandma had aplastic anemia and platelet donations blessed her and my family with time. I never got to meet her, but I know those last few moments had an impact on my family.” [TVW Link] [MP3 Audio Link]
Liias also noted in his floor remarks and committee testimony that the United States still has an outdated and discriminatory policy on blood donations from gay and bisexual men. He is an advocate for removing these kinds of barriers.
SB 5179 passed the House without any changes. It will be delivered to the Governor Inslee for his consideration.
Additional information:
Sen. Liias: Senate Health & Long Term Care Committee Testimony