Swiss Transfusion SRC has announced that blood donation criteria will be relaxed from February 1, expanding the pool of eligible donors. The changes, approved by Swissmedic, will allow donations from individuals who previously had blood transfusions or spent extended periods in the UK.

"socially significant step"
February 1 marks a pivotal shift in Swiss public health policy as Swiss Transfusion SRC tears down restrictive barriers that have stood for over 20 years. In a bold move approved by the Swiss Agency for Therapeutic Products (Swissmedic), the criteria for blood donation are being radically relaxed, instantly expanding the pool of eligible life-savers across the cantons. This is not merely an administrative update; it is a "socially significant step" that acknowledges the evolving landscape of medical science and risk management.
For too long, rigid exclusion criteria have sidelined willing donors. Now, individuals who have previously received blood transfusions—a group once permanently deferred—are being welcomed back into the fold. The new regulations replace blanket bans with precise, evidence-based waiting periods. This decisive action comes at a critical juncture, signaling that Switzerland is ready to prioritize accessibility and scientific pragmatism over outdated caution. The message from Swiss Transfusion SRC is clear: the system is evolving, and the doors are opening wider than ever before.
For over two decades, a shadow hung over potential donors who had spent significant time in the United Kingdom during the 1980s and 1990s. The specter of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), widely known as "Mad Cow Disease," forced Swiss health authorities to impose a strict ban on this demographic. That exile ends in February. Following a comprehensive risk evaluation, Swiss Transfusion SRC has declared that the risk of transmission via blood transfusion is now considered "extremely low."
Switzerland boasts a pristine record, with zero reported cases of vCJD to date. This statistical reality has empowered authorities to lift the blockade. Residents who lived in the UK during the height of the crisis are finally eligible to donate again. This reversal corrects a long-standing exclusion, aligning Swiss policy with current epidemiological data. It is a triumph of data over fear, reintegrating a massive segment of the expatriate and traveling population back into the donor ecosystem.
Bureaucracy is bowing to science as the new rules introduce specific, manageable timelines for medical deferrals. Previously, receiving a blood transfusion could mean a lifetime ban. Under the new regime, a waiting period of just four months applies after each transfusion, regardless of the country where the procedure took place. This dramatic reduction removes a significant hurdle for those who have recovered from medical interventions and wish to give back.
Furthermore, the guidelines for surgical procedures have been fine-tuned with precision. A one-year waiting period now applies for neurosurgical procedures performed within Switzerland. Similarly, recipients of dental implants post-1993 are cleared to donate, subject only to a rejection period of at least two weeks depending on the complexity of the surgery. These nuanced changes reflect a sophisticated understanding of risk, ensuring safety without enforcing unnecessary lifetime exclusions.
These relaxations arrive not a moment too soon, as Switzerland grapples with a concerning downward trend in donor participation. The numbers paint a stark picture: in 2024, the nation saw a 1.3% decrease in blood donations compared to the previous year, with the total volume falling to 260,349 donations. While the strict selection and control processes remain inviolable to ensure safety, the shrinking donor base poses a latent threat to the healthcare system's resilience.
Swiss Transfusion SRC is confronting this decline head-on. By widening the criteria, they are attempting to reverse the slump and stabilize the supply chain. Every drop counts in a system that relies entirely on voluntary contributions. The decline in 2024 serves as a wake-up call; the relaxation of criteria is the direct, strategic response to ensure that Swiss hospitals never face a critical shortage.
The February changes are the latest wave in a broader movement to modernize Switzerland's blood donation landscape. As of January 1, 2025, the right to free blood donation was formally enshrined in law, cementing the practice as a civic pillar. This legal framework coincided with another landmark shift: the lifting of discriminatory restrictions on men who have sex with men (MSM).
Until the start of this year, men were barred from donating if they had engaged in sexual activity with other men in the previous 12 months—a rule that many viewed as archaic. Now, eligibility is determined by individual risk behavior rather than sexual orientation. Combined with the upcoming February relaxations for UK residents and transfusion recipients, Switzerland is rewriting the social contract of donation. The system is becoming more inclusive, more scientific, and more desperate for the participation of every eligible citizen.