Sabtu, 21 Februari 2015

Derek Brocklehurst - A Year on PrEP, That's All He Wanted


After taking PrEP for one year, I found the love of my life and decided to give monogamy a try.

by Derek Brocklehurst
San Francisco, CA

I started PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) in October 2011. I was presecribed Truvada "off label" before it had actually been approved for PrEP by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration.) FDA gave its approval in July of 2012.

I had an honest, open-ended discussion with my Nurse Practitioner and, without any judgment on his end regarding my frequent condomless sex practices, he said, "You would be a great candidate for this medication."

It was covered 100% by my insurance, and Gilead also offers co-pay assistance programs to cover the co-pay of the medication if you are prescribed it, so I literally paid $0 for this potentially pricey preventative.

I had zero side effects during the year I took it, and it gave me peace of mind. I was very open about my condomless sex practices with many multiple partners and, along with seropositioning, I believe it has contributed to helping to keep me HIV negative.

I think stigmatizing anything in our community is not the way to go, so PrEP should be just another option out there to help negative guys stay negative. It's also important to get regular (every 6 mos-1yr) kidney function tests to make sure it's not doing long term damage to your kids, as well as bone density tests and evaluations.

After taking PrEP for one year, I found the love of my life and decided to give monogamy a try. I stopped PrEP after just one year of daily adherence (I really never missed a dose! Every morning.)

It's always important to re-evaluate where you are at in your sexual life. If PrEP makes sense, talk to your provider and get on it! If it doesn't make sense to be taking a daily anti-viral medication that could have long term effects on other body systems, reassess and move on. I have found that honesty and communication are the best policies in any relationship: be it with my provider, my friends, or my primary lover.
 

Jumat, 20 Februari 2015

Interview Part 2: Toronto Health Promoter Chooses PrEP

via Positive Lite (Canada)

Part 2 of an interview with Len Tooley, an HIV-negative gay guy who is taking pre-exposure prophylaxis. He works in Toronto as a gay men’s health promoter, HIV educator, tester and counsellor. In this part of the interview, he discusses the conversations he had with his doctor before getting a prescription for PrEP.

Excerpt:
It took about four appointments for me to actually get the prescription from my doctor. The first time I mentioned the idea he told me that before we considered it, we’d have to have a lengthy discussion about what was going through my mind when I decided not to use condoms. I told him that I wished it was that simple (I’m an HIV counsellor after all), that it wasn’t as simple as a ‘yes or no’ decision, and that I could guarantee him I was trying my absolute hardest to have perfectly safe sex. I just wasn’t succeeding perfectly.

At the second appointment (I was there for something else) I again brought up the idea of PrEP. This time he was still a bit hesitant, and told me that if he was going to prescribe PrEP I was going to have to get blood tests to test my kidney and liver functions and make sure I was HIV-negative, and then, depending on those results, we could talk about it more. I agreed, he gave me the test requisition, and that day I went to a lab and got my blood work done.

Once I knew my blood work results had arrived, I scheduled another appointment and saw my doctor. He confirmed that I was still HIV-negative and that all my kidney and liver function tests were okay. I was pretty nervous and excited. He asked me what I’d do if I experienced the side effects of the medication. I told him that I knew that only about 5% of people in studies of the drug had reported side effects, so it wasn’t too likely, but that if I did have those side effects I’d reconsider staying on it if they didn’t go away and became intolerable. Then I told him that I knew there could be longer-term side effects, but that right now it was probably better for me to go on Truvada temporarily while I feel I’m at risk for HIV, than get HIV and have to take that drug, or other drugs, for the rest of my life.


Read the rest.

 

Aidsmap---PrEP wars: debating pre-exposure prophylaxis in the gay community

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Jumat, 13 Februari 2015

Toronto Health Promoter Chooses PrEP

via Positive Lite (Canada)

Interview with Len Tooley, an HIV-negative gay guy who is taking pre-exposure prophylaxis. He works in Toronto as a gay men’s health promoter, HIV educator, tester and counsellor. In the first of three interviews about being on PrEP, he discusses his decision to go on it.

Excerpt:
I’m not perfect – even if I wish I was.  
And I have to admit, I haven’t had perfect condom use throughout my life. I’ve managed to stay HIV-negative for quite a while, but this was partly a combination of “responsible” condom use and – when “not-so-responsible” – luck.  
Those moments when I had done something that I knew might put me at higher risk often led to a lot of anxiety. Not constant, overwhelming anxiety, but one that prevented me from feeling good (meaning, guilt free and shameless) about the awesome sex that I had had. 
Read the whole thing on Positive Lite.


 

Jumat, 06 Februari 2015

WNYC Radio Interview on PrEP - Featuring Dr. Robert Grant

"I think we need to find better ways to engage young people... HIV is a problem that can be solved, it's not just something you have to be afraid of, that you have to stay home, cowering from..."

via The Leonard Lopate Show on WNYC


It's been over a year since The FDA approved Truvada, a once a day medication that prevents HIV infection. But why are so few people taking it? Dr. Robert Grant, a professor at the University of California San Francisco, talks about the drug and why it’s slow to catch on. He’s the lead scientist who developed the treatment, which is known as “pre-exposure prophylaxis” or PrEP.











Kamis, 05 Februari 2015

Chicago Training on HIV Prevention and Treatment Science - Feb 10 to 12

If you're in the Chicago area and you’re interested in updates on HIV science and treatment, this training is for you!

BTAN Chicago is hosting a training event on February 10, 11, 12 at the University of Chicago from 10AM-4PM.

Knapp Center for Biomedical Discovery

Please RSVP to Antoine Maxwell at antoine.maxwell@me.com.



Rabu, 04 Februari 2015

Next-PrEP clinical trial launches in U.S. cities



Next-PreP study is currently enrolling


Despite our best efforts to prevent new infections, more than 50,000 people in the U.S. are infected with HIV every year as reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). We know that young ( aged 21-35) gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men are becoming infected more than anyone else. This is especially true among young men of color. While condoms are effective in preventing HIV, we know that people don’t always use them. For that reason we are trying to find new ways to prevent HIV. Next-PrEP is a study using three drugs to prevent HIV in HIV negative people; this is known as pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP. The idea behind PrEP is that if an HIV-negative person takes certain pills on a regular schedule before they are exposed to HIV through sex, they may be protected from getting HIV infection.

We know that two of the drugs that will be used in this study are safe for people who are HIV positive. However, we want to see if they are just as safe and easy to tolerate in people who are HIV negative. This will be the first study to see if the drug maraviroc is also safe and tolerable when used by HIV-negative people as an HIV prevention strategy. We will test four different combinations of medications.

NEXT-PrEP is currently enrolling a total of 400 men and transgender women aged 18 and older who have sex with men from 13 cities in the United States and Puerto Rico. In early 2013, the study will begin to enroll a total of 200 women and transgender men aged 18 and older who have sex with men.

This research project is funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health through the HIV Prevention Trials Network and the AIDS Clinical Trials Group.

PrEP Education Events to Honor National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

The Black AIDS Institute has partnered with HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Region IV office to support the Institute’s Black Treatment Advocates Networks(BTAN) in providing PrEP education in recognition of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. The Institute’s goal is to ensure that Black communities have access to all HIV prevention tools such as PrEP information, education, and knowledge of local PrEP resources.

“We have the tools to end the AIDS epidemic, the question is no longer CAN we but WILL we end the epidemic”—Phill Wilson, CEO Black AIDS Institute.