There is a rule though: you have to wait four months from the date of your tattoo or piercing before donating. And if you give blood between four months to a year after having a tattoo or piercing, staff at the donation centre might have a few extra safety checks to do.
Then, why can’t you donate blood after a piercing?
You often can’t donate blood for 3 months after getting a piercing, either. Like tattoos, piercings can introduce foreign material and pathogens into your body. Hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and HIV can be contracted through blood contaminated by a piercing.
Also know, what will disqualify you from donating blood?
You will be denied if your blood tests positive for: HIV-1, HIV-2, human T-lymphotropic virus (HTLV)-I, HTLV-II, hepatitis C virus, hepatitis B virus, West Nile Virus (WNV), and T. pallidum (syphilis). Blood donation is actually a quick and easy way to get tested for all of these things.
Who should not donate blood?
Persons with the following conditions are not allowed to donate blood anyime:
- Cancer.
- Cardiac disease.
- Sever lung disease.
- Hepatitis B and C.
- HIV infection, AIDS or Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD)
- High risk occupation (e.g. prostitution)
- Unexplained weight loss of more than 5 kg over 6 months.
- Chronic alcoholism.