Boundless B Podcast
In Part 2 of this powerful two-part series, Dana Kuhn’s story moves from private devastation to public accountability. After losing his wife because Dana unknowingly contracted HIV through contaminated blood products, Dana began uncovering internal documents that suggested warnings about blood safety existed earlier than families were ever told. What began as counseling work inside a hospital quietly transformed into an investigation. Through Freedom of Information Act requests, stacks of CDC memos, and collaboration with activists and lawmakers, Dana built what became known as “The Trail of AIDS.” That trail helped trigger an Institute of Medicine investigation, contributed to the Ricky Ray Hemophilia Relief Fund Act, and led to the establishment of the nation’s first Blood Safety Council. But this episode is not just history. Dana is speaking out again because key blood safety oversight bodies have recently been dismantled. The guardrails built from tragedy, he warns, can be weakened faster than people realize. This is a story about accountability, organized community power, and why blood safety is not a policy debate — it is a promise.
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