Sabtu, 30 Mei 2015

The New Frontier

Prevention, PrEP, the whole damn thing — it all boils down to the human impulse to have sex without condoms. Thirty years into an epidemic, that’s still hard to talk about in public without hysteria and morality.

by anon, San Franciso
[name withheld for now]

I have been taking Truvada for two months. 


I’m 39, HIV-negative, and have been sexually active with men since I was 13 years old. So that’s 26 years of condoms, anxiety about HIV and navigating safety with several thousand partners. I’ve been a sex worker for 14 years and in my free time, a sexual enthusiast who loves bathhouses, online hookups and sex clubs. I’m versatile and attracted to a range of men. 

In other words, I’m a good candidate for PrEP.

I’ve remained HIV negative with a combination of fear, will power, good boy training, strategic partner selection and three rounds of post-exposure medication.

Over the years, I’ve realized that most of the prevention messages were wrong: that HIV is not orally transmitted, that HIV is much harder to get for tops, that by and large it’s a fragile virus. These are all things that HIV counselors and prevention campaigns lied to me and my community about by using fear, shaming and millions of dollars. In order to get an HIV test, I would have to go to the principal’s office and take a pop quiz about the five transmissible body fluids and get a finger wagging for the unprotected sex I’d had, which I grossly underestimated in our counseling session.

Fear, for most people, is a short-term deterrent. It’s like crack and it wears off.

HIV prevention, like most American entities, has failed to adopt tactics that are sustainable in the long term to keep people uninfected.

As I learned the truth about HIV (by becoming an HIV counselor myself and working with young street-based injectors) I started taking more risks myself. At a certain point, I felt like my risk tolerance had the potential to get me infected. So I spent a lot of time considering PrEP. I spoke to doctors, friends working at all levels of prevention and poz men on Truvada. I read up on it and finally decided to try it.

I offer these caveats because contrary to government and mental health industry perceptions, I am not suicidal and if there is a problem with my self-esteem, it’s that I have too much of it.

My doctor is a gay man in the Castro who has a lot of patients on PrEP. He treated me with respect, as if my personal research could be helpful to him.

The sex I’ve had in the last two months has been some of the most spiritual, connected and passionate sex I’ve ever had. The persistent anxiety I’ve lived with for so many years is gone.

I have not been using condoms as a top or bottom and have been playing mostly with undetectable HIV positive men. Ironically, undetectable men have emerged as the safest group of people for me to play with. HIV negative men, especially versatile ones, stand the chance of having newly seroconverted with high viral loads. So I’m thoughtful about it. I’m ruling out anyone who does crystal meth. Barebacking and online hookup websites, oft-demonized, are excellent for starting conversations about health and serostatus because people include status and sexual practices in their profile.

Some of you may want to scream BUT PEOPLE LIE! Sure. Sure they do. 



In my experience, HIV positive men do not lie as much. Most of the poz men I’ve been with are extremely concerned about my health, because they live in the midst of their own health condition.

If there is widespread misrepresentation going on among gay men, it’s twofold: 1. HIV negative men lying about when they were last tested, 2. a widespread failure to initiate a sexual health conversation in the first place.

PrEP, for me, has been a great conversation starter with sex partners. 

People want to know more. I put it in my online profiles. There are HIV positive men who can’t wrap their heads around barebacking with me, even if I’m on Truvada. And I totally respect those men for saying so. This is the new frontier.

I have had persistent diarrhea as a possible side effect from the Truvada. I got tested for parasites and don’t have any. But that’s puzzling, because I’ve been on Truvada two other times with no side effects. It might be a food allergy. And this is part of living on new medications: being part of a grand social experiment where you don’t know for sure what causes what.

I am keeping this anonymous now because I have watched some of my friends get shredded in the media for coming out as barebackers. They have been treated like lepers, either by HIV negative people who secretly bareback or HIV positive people who bareback but don’t think an HIV negative person should have that privilege.

Prevention, PrEP, the whole damn thing — it all boils down to the human impulse to have sex without condoms. Thirty years into an epidemic, that’s still hard to talk about in public without hysteria and morality.

Yesterday a large prevention agency worker urged me not to write this blog: “They’ll cut our funding.” For these reasons and more, I’m staying anonymous for now.  This early into taking PrEP, I don’t want that sort of scrutiny and shaming.

When HIV prevention agencies recruit volunteers for HIV vaccine trials, they often use patriotic rhetoric and studio photography to make these people look heroic. Many of the people in those vaccine trials are having unprotected sex to some degree, or they wouldn’t be worth studying.

Instead of denigrating people on PrEP as willful, filthy whores, what if we respected them as people who were willing to venture into uncharted territory for their own health and the good of the world? 

[read posts, watch videos, from 2011]

Rico - "Judge me if you want and call me a Truvada whore, I don't care"












by Rico
West Palm Beach, Florida

I have been on Travada for 4 months now. My primary care giver who is gay and have been going to for 30 years didn't know about PrEP which shocked me. He then referred me to an infectious disease specialist who shook her finger at me about condoms and the need for them.

I just looked at her and said "I'm 54 years old and HIV negative and I'm here for the drug, are you going to fucking give it to me?" 

There seems to be a never ending need to cling to the past, one which I might add is not working so well for the "old school" weather it's straight or gay, the infection rates continue to climb.

I'm thrilled I met someone on a hookup in NYC who talked to me about it which started my journey to get on it. Since being on the drug I talk to everyone about it, judge me if you want and call me a Truvada whore, I don't care.

The only side effect I have experienced were dreams and they have faded over the months. Other than that, nothing.

Happy in Florida.
Rico

Rabu, 27 Mei 2015

VIDEO: Eric's 34th Day on Truvada as PrEP - No Regrets and Peace of Mind

via Eric McCulley
Atlanta, Georgia

I don't have any regrets, but what I do have is peace of mind. And that is exactly what I was looking for with this medication. 

I feel great, I feel empowered, and I feel in control of my sexual health and my health in general.


Eric was recently interviewed about PrEP by the NPR affiliate station in Atlanta.
Check it out here.

Minggu, 24 Mei 2015

PICS from the Community Talk Show "Can a Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color?"

On Wednesday, May 22, more than 60 folks joined Project RSP! (Ready, Set, PrEP!), My PrEP Experience, hosts David Dodd and Ken Like Barbie, entertainer ButtaFlySouL, Gustavo Varela and Sybil Hosek at Center on Halsted to discuss a revolutionary new way to protect ourselves from HIV called PrEP. Some pics from this community talk show below - more on the Project RSP! page on FB.

The Chicago Black Gay Men's Caucus, and others, Tweeted about the event.

Check out the right hand side of this blog for info and links to learn more about PrEP. Another community talk show on PrEP will be held later this year on the south side of Chicago. Watch this space!






The event was made possible through the collective efforts of the following organizations: Blackstone Avenue Marketing, Clubhouse Productions, Gilead Sciences, High Society Entertainment Group, John Stroger Hospital, K Dock Media, My PrEP Experience, National Youth Pride Services, PrideIndex.com, Rails Marketing Group, United Black Pride, and AIDS Foundation of Chicago.

 

Sabtu, 23 Mei 2015

I Haven't Given Up, I've TAKEN CHARGE - One Man's Story of Taking HIV Meds for Prevention


by Nick Literski, Seattle

[This story was first published in May, 2011 - and became the inspiration for the "My PrEP Experience" series on the gay men's health blog called LifeLube, sharing the real stories of people who have chosen to use PrEP. This re-published post officially launches "My PrEP Experience" as it's very own blog today. Just this week on May 21, Nick and his partner were featured in an ABC news story about Truvada as PrEP titled "Truvada Helps Couple Cope With Reality of Love and HIV."]

Recently, I was surprised to learn that I had allegedly “given up on gay men.”

According to Michael Weinstein, president and founder of the so-called “AIDS Healthcare Foundation,” I now consider the lives of gay men, including myself, “disposable.” What great crime have I committed to deserve Mr. Weinstein’s condemnation? I take Truvada once a day, as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), in order to protect myself from HIV infection.

My partner and I have a mutually open relationship. In reaching that point, we did the responsible things that a new couple should do to protect themselves. We used condoms until we’d been together long enough to rely on HIV testing. We then chose to be fluid bonded, while always playing “safe” with other sexual partners. Every six months, we were both dutifully tested for the HIV virus, usually going to the local testing facility together. We were screened on a regular basis for other sexually transmitted infections. If we made a mistake with regard to our agreed precautions (and yes, I did so on at least one occasion) we were honest with each other.

About two years into our relationship, we were surprised to hear that my partner’s HIV test was “inconclusive,” and that the testing facility would be submitting it for further testing. A week later, we called back for the final report, and were relieved when an obviously hurried staffer told my partner he was “just fine.” We continued our very active sex life, which almost always involved me being the receptive partner in anal intercourse. During the next few months, however, my normally robust partner had an unusual number of illnesses, particularly skin infections. He became suspicious, and since we were nearly due for our six month testing anyway, he scheduled another test.

As I sat in the waiting area, I received a two word text from my partner: “I’m positive.”

To make matters worse, the staffer had pulled my partner’s chart, and found that his last “inconclusive” test had actually been positive. Due to the mistake of a careless (former) staffer, we had received an incorrect report.

As traumatizing as it was for my partner to find out that he was HIV positive, and as angry as he was about the earlier false report, he was truly terrified that he had exposed me to the virus innumerable times over the past several months. I was promptly tested, and we were relieved to learn that both my rapid testing and RNA results were negative.

Even so, my partner continued to experience tremendous anxiety over the possibility of infecting someone he loved. His worry extended to all sorts of seemingly-mundane possibilities, even to the point of not wanting me to share the same handle on our interchangeable-head electric toothbrush. While it’s normal for newly-seroconverted men to experience high levels of anxiety regarding sex, the impact on our intimate life was profound. My partner had experienced enough broken condom incidents over the years that his concerns weren’t alleviated by using them. At the same time, it was difficult for me to adapt to continuous condom use, due to both physical discomfort and my own emotional response to a physical barrier. Sex became much less frequent, and was burdened by worry and frustration.

In time, and with the help of an outstanding physician, my partner’s viral load became undetectable. In the meantime, both of us had educated ourselves on HIV. We knew that a Swiss study indicated that the risk of my being infected by my partner was now extremely low (due to his undetectable viral load), even to the point that some physicians in Switzerland believed protection was unnecessary.

My partner was able to relax more, and we began to settle into the “new normal” of being a serodiscordant couple.Even at this stage, however, there were emotional challenges.

I still hated using condoms, and I still wanted to feel my partner inside me.




I felt the risk was low enough to be acceptable, and a selfish part of me wanted to be the one making the decision on whether to use protection. Another part of me knew, deep down, that by encouraging unprotected sex with my partner, I wasn’t giving my partner’s emotional well-being the importance he deserved. All too often, I placed my partner in the difficult position of wanting to protect me from infection, while at the same time wanting to satisfy my desire for sex without physical barriers. When my partner gave in to my preference, he generally pulled out before ejaculating, but afterward he dealt with understandable worry. The combination of anxiety and infrequency continued to wear on our relationship.

Somewhere in the midst of all this, I reached a state of mind that seems almost universal among HIV negative partners of HIV positive men.

As low as the risk of infection seemed to be, I still had a nagging worry that I might become positive.

I hated using condoms. I hated seeing my partner constantly worry about infecting me. I worried that my partner would grow so tired of that worry that he might choose to leave the relationship in pursuit of an HIV positive partner. I resented that at times, my partner seemed more comfortable having sex with another HIV positive man than with me. None of these feelings were particularly rational, but they existed.

In keeping with that irrationality, I felt what so many HIV negative men in serodiscordant relationships feel. In a very real sense, part of me wished that I would become infected, just so the whole issue would “go away.” What seemed like a “manageable condition” with new medications seemed preferable to the ongoing stress and frustration. In time, and with seeing the physical problems my partner suffered as a result of his HIV infection, I got past that stage. Unfortunately, many HIV negative men in serodiscordant relationships seem to go through that stage, and some don’t to their senses before permanently affecting their health.

We gradually settled into a “serodiscordant detente,” in which my partner reluctantly agreed that it was up to me whether I wanted to take the risks inherent in unprotected sex, but he almost always pulled out before ejaculation.

At times, I selfishly prevented the latter from happening, not considering the stress I was causing him. There was no simple solution, so while we could still have great sex, it was always accompanied by some level of anxiety and guilt. We were handling it imperfectly, but perhaps the best we could at the time.

Then came November of 2010, and the New England Journal of Medicine’s publication of a study showing the effectiveness of PrEP for men who have sex with men. Our physician, a true expert in the field of HIV prevention and treatment, was familiar with the study prior to its publication. Once results were published, he had a frank discussion with my partner about our sexual activities (something like “Don’t lie to me, I have a really big needle that I can jab you with if you’re lying”). Because we have a great deal of trust in our doctor, my partner was honest with him about our behaviors. Based on that discussion, our doctor asked me to visit him and discuss the possibility of taking PrEP. I made an appointment for a week later.

In the meantime, I agonized over the issue. I searched the Internet and read everything I could find on the subject, both for and against PrEP. In particular, I carefully read the actual study report in the New England Journal of Medicine. I made notes of the questions raised in my mind, and brought them with me when I visited my doctor. We discussed my questions thoroughly, along with the fact that I already had a recent HIV test establishing that I was still negative. My doctor outlined the requirement that I would take the medication every day as directed, and that he would test me for kidney function and other potential side effects on a regular basis. In the end, I decided that the benefits outweighed the risks, and I chose to begin taking Truvada.

The cost of PrEP is naturally a major factor. My physician informed me that several insurance companies were actively considering coverage of PrEP, knowing that it was much less expensive than treatment of an HIV positive patient. Fortunately, my health insurance company had already chosen to cover PrEP, and I’ve never had a problem obtaining Truvada with a reasonable copay.

Perhaps the second most common question I’m asked is whether I’ve had side effects from using PrEP. It’s true that for some men, Truvada can cause nausea or diarrhea (usually only for the first month of use), or even kidney damage. I’m pleased to say that I haven’t experienced such problems. I take my medication every night. The first morning after I began taking Truvada, I had some very minor diarrhea, but this has never recurred, so it may have been entirely coincidental. True to his word, my physician has insisted on regular tests to monitor my kidney function, HIV status, and other health measures. My test results have been entirely normal.

In fact, the only “side effect” I’ve experienced while using PrEP is frustration over the anti-PrEP propaganda efforts of Michael Weinstein and his AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

I’ve read a great deal of the material issued by Mr. Weinstein, and I recently participated with him in a public forum on the use of PrEP, along with several committed advocates of HIV prevention. Where experts presented factual data regarding PrEP, Mr. Weinstein attempted to inspire fear of PrEP, and advocate against the makers of Truvada. Mr. Weinstein’s fear-mongering should come as no surprise, given that he previously attempted to sue the makers of Viagra, claiming that the erectile dysfunction drug contributed to the spread of HIV.

Mr. Weinstein consistently misrepresents the study data. First, he claims that PrEP only proved to be 44% effective in preventing HIV infection. He avoids stating that closer examination of the study results shows that those in the study group who became infected with HIV were found to have no Truvada in their bloodstream, or only trace levels. In other words, the infected individuals failed to actually take Truvada daily as directed. None of the men who were found to actually be taking Truvada on a daily basis throughout the study became infected with HIV.

Second, Mr. Weinstein complains that the study wasn’t “real world,” because those enrolled received monthly prevention counseling and health monitoring. To Mr. Weinstein, it was really the counseling that prevented infection, rather than PrEP. What Mr. Weinstein fails to recognize is that all study participants, including those taking a placebo, were given the same counseling and monitoring. In other words, the controlled study took this factor into account, so that the use of PrEP would truly be the only difference between the groups. When the study reports that PrEP was effective in reducing HIV infections, it reflects a situation in which all other factors were equal. For the men taking placebo, counseling alone didn’t protect them from HIV infection.

Perhaps knowing that consistent, daily use of PrEP really did prevent HIV infection, Mr. Weinstein insists that gay men cannot be relied upon to take Truvada daily. Mr. Weinstein doesn’t explain why he believes that the same men who can’t be trusted to take a pill every day can be expected to use a condom every time they have sex (the only prevention method he seems to approve).

My own anecdotal experience contradicts Mr. Weinstein’s theory. I take my Truvada every night before bed. In the five months I’ve been taking the drug, I’ve forgotten only once, and I took it the following morning, making it a “late” dose, rather than a “missed” dose. I’m not always the most responsible person on the planet, but I take my medication as directed, because I realize that as part of a serodiscordant relationship, I have a comparatively high risk of infection. I take my medication as directed, because I have an excellent physician who reminds me about how important that is.

I take my medication as directed, because I love my partner, and knowing that I take PrEP daily helps reduce his worry and stress.

Mr. Weinstein complains that the availability of PrEP will make men less likely to use condoms, thus making them less protected against HIV infection. While I can’t deny that this may occur for some men, my own experience reflects quite differently. While my partner has an undetectable viral load, resulting in a less than 1% chance of him infecting me, that chance continues to exist. Before PrEP became available, I was taking a calculated risk with my partner, because even with counseling from my trusted physician, physical comfort and intimacy without barriers were ultimately more important to me than further reducing that tiny 1%. My physician, having directly asked about this, determined that I was a good candidate for a method that would overcome those objections.

PrEP didn’t make me stop using condoms.

Instead PrEP provided me with protection that I would use consistently, rather than protection that I was already rejecting. With PrEP, that 1% risk of infection from my partner’s undetectable viral load has been further reduced by my own level of personal protection (92% for those who use PrEP daily).

In the end, my belief that the benefits of PrEP would outweigh the risks has proven true for me. I’m carefully monitored to ensure that I don’t develop harmful side effects. I comply with the treatment regimen faithfully. My insurance covers the medication. My overall level of protection against HIV infection has increased dramatically. Just as importantly, however, PrEP has made a real difference in my relationship with my partner. We’re able to be intimate in a way both of us prefer, without the fears and conflicting feelings that were present even with condoms.

I haven’t “given up on gay men,” or deemed my life “disposable.”

Rather, I’ve made a responsible health choice that works for me, and I’m happy with it.

Jumat, 22 Mei 2015

Let's Talk About PrEP People! Join Us Tonight at Chicago's Center on Halsted

Can A Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color?

Join us to discuss/debate.

All the info you need is below and at this FB link. Doors open 6p for appetizers and socialzing, show starts at 7p with ButtaFlySouL. Free, fun, food, FABULOUS. Watch the promo video.

click 2 enlarge

Rabu, 20 Mei 2015

That's What He Said Part 2 - Jody's Persistence (and Community Support) Pays Off

“Come in and see me. Tell me more and let’s get this fixed,” he said....


...While my experience with Doctor Nameless wasn’t ideal, it was eye-opening. If it had to happen to someone, I’m glad that was someone who had the tools, resources, and voice to find a better solution and seek a change.


by Jody Wheeler*

When I say “bitch” I didn’t mean randomly. Facebook is mostly just cat pictures, traffic complaints and filtered selfies, after all. Noise not signal.

Yet there are some great groups on Facebook, pages on a wide variety of issues, run by people who interested in sharing information, providing support, and making things better. PrEP Facts: Rethinking HIV Prevention and Sex, is one of those Facebook groups.

PrEP Facts was started by Damon Jacobs, a therapist and PrEP activist from New York City. I’d found his group it while researching PrEP and Truvada. While often raucous and combative, that energy comes from its passionate membership — doctors, educators, epidemiologists, regular folk — deeply committed to getting the word out about PrEP. Information, resources, and support are all to be found there. I knew I needed to post there.

On-line, I recounted a (far briefer) version of my visit with Doctor Nameless. At the end of my tale, Iasked the group for both help in finding a better doctor and more information on bone-density loss, the one aspect of my recent craziness I wasn’t up on. I didn’t give Doctor Nameless’ real name out in the public forum. His medical group — UCLA Health — that I eventually stated.

In spite of my experience, I wasn’t looking to start an internet pogrom of torches and angry villagers against the man. It was important to get the facts out, to find out if what I went through was a common experience, but not to lambast someone by name, just as an example. I did decide that, on a case by case basis, if appropriate, I would disclose his name.

The response from the PrEP facts group was overwhelmingly affirmative. Not just posts that commiserated with me, but actual, hands down great advice and recommendations. The names of good doctors from across the city poured in. Some people even recommended I fly to their city to see their doctor or go to the clinic they worked at. It wasn’t lost on me that was something I might be able to swing, but what about all those other folks that couldn’t?

The thing that most surprised me were the numbers of folks who told me that Doctor Nameless’ response was unethical, bordering on malpractice.

I hadn’t thought about it in those terms. Annoying? Sure. Maddening, no doubt. Bang-off-the-walls-and-jump-in-a-lake-of-ice-cubes? It felt that way. But the ethical or malpractice suggestion gave me pause.

The American Medical Association says that, as patients, we have the:

“…. right to receive information from physicians and to discuss the benefits, risks, and costs of appropriate treatment alternatives. Patients should receive guidance from their physicians as to the optimal course of action…The patient has the right to courtesy, respect, dignity, responsiveness, and timely attention to his or her needs.”

which translated as requiring patients to receive correct information, to treat our concerns as real, and not to have a physician substitute their values for our own. For mine.

Another group member compared what happened to what some women have experienced from certain doctors and pharmacists when they ask to go on the Pill. While I’m still not convinced Doctor Nameless engaged in malpractice, in light of that comparison and the AMA’s standards, I don’t think what happened was all that ethical.

The most surprising thing that happened as a result of my post was that another physician from UCLA Health reached out and got in contact with me, Dr. Raphael Landovitz. Landovitz is a researcher and practitioner, the co-director also Co-Director of the UCLA CARE clinic, which is specifically devoted to the care and prevention of HIV. He’s also been at the forefront of implementing PrEP across Los Angeles.




On my call with Dr. Landovitz, he was incredibly apologetic, mortified even, by my experience. It wasn’t what was supposed to happen anywhere within UCLA Health. He was surprised when I told him the real name of Doctor Nameless, and quite frustrated to find that Doctor Nameless’ attitude was more wide spread than he knew.

“Come in and see me. Tell me more and let’s get this fixed,” he said.


So I did.

It’s pretty wild when the head of a busy medical practice bends-over backwards to accommodate your schedule. (Surprising limber, that Dr. L.) Right of the bat that a huge upgrade from my earlier encounter.

When we did meet a few days later, it was crazy how impressive Dr. Landovitz was. He knew his shit. Better than I could ever hope to. I had had questions. He had answers. The right answers. Detailed. He citied studies. He explained what those studies meant in non-scientific human speak. (I can speak some Scientific Speak, but just not that fluent.)

He floored me when he pulled out a spreadsheet with various measures of my body functioning. He showed how we’d track all those measures, making sure there were no side effects from Truvada. While unlikely, he pointed out what could happen — and how to fix it.

I’m a nerd. I love data. Just between us? I had a nerd-gasm.

As we wrapped up this initial visit, he explained to me the prescription for Truvada, how to take it, what to take it with, and about the follow-up visits, near-term and long. I felt so much better about my decision to go on PrEP. That cinched it as the right choice for me.

When AIDS hit the public in 1982, I was 13. I was just putting my sexuality together, the whole “realizing I’m different” thing that young gaylings invariably have to do. As I grew, so grew the epidemic. People died.

My first job out of college was as an HIV/AIDS educator with the Whitman-Walker Clinics, trying to stop some of that death from happening. My second, after I got my Masters in Counseling Psychology, was as a therapist for people either dying of AIDS or dealing with HIV. I was 24.

Whether I wanted it to or not, “Gay” and “AIDS” had become linked. Joined. Inseparable. And that lasted…until now.

With the advent of PrEP, there’s now have second, potent weapon to stop HIV infection. While it doesn’t block all STIs, taken correctly, it does HIV. Hell, taken incorrectly, it still works pretty damn well. It’s a remarkable advance. I’m glad I’m here and healthy to see it.

While my experience with Doctor Nameless wasn’t ideal, it was eye-opening. If it had to happen to someone, I’m glad that was someone who had the tools, resources, and voice to find a better solution and seek a change.

I got to meet Dr. Landovitz, who I can’t speak of highly enough. In addition to continuing to see me for PrEP, he’s working along with his boss, Dr. Judith Carrier, to make sure what happened to me doesn’t happen to anyone else in the UCLA Health system. He told me to refer anyone, Los Angeles or not, to his clinic.

They’d do what they can to find them the best referrals possible. The UCLA CARE clinic’s number is (310) 557-2273.

For the Doctor Nameless, who I think meant well, but fell far short of optimal patient care, I’m hoping the accumulated data from the new CDC guidelines, as well as information from other co-workers, turns around his point of view. If he remains resistant to prescribing Truvada for PrEP, he should make referrals on to other clinicians better able to help patients decide if PrEP is right for them.

For me, my PrEP experience is only starting. Not just on a preventative medicinal level, but on an activist one.

It’s now important for me to get the message out about this treatment, share information, and work to bring down the barriers that prevent anyone, at any societal level, from accessing this treatment. I was here to see the birth of this pandemic of HIV.

I’m now hoping that My PrEP Experience will include seeing the end of HIV once and for all.


*A former therapist and social worker, Jody Wheeler, M.Ed., M.F.A., is a writer and director in Los Angeles California.

Selasa, 19 Mei 2015

That's What He Said - Part 1

What had begun as a promising visit to the doctor to begin PrEP, the most revolutionary advance in HIV prevention in decades, had instead become a misadventure into ignorance, idiocy, and irritation.


by Jody Wheeler*
Los Angeles, CA

As the elevator dinged downward, my headache ripped free the sides of my skull, pounded the torn pieces into a fine mist, and set to work violently assaulting the naked nerves.

Things hadn’t gone well.

Not at all.

What had begun as a promising visit to the doctor to begin PrEP, the most revolutionary advance in HIV prevention in decades, had instead become a misadventure into ignorance, idiocy, and irritation. The first two of those belonged to my doctor. The last, as my pounding head attested, me.

Picture for a moment a 40-something white guy, a poster-child for education, a beneficiary of cultural privilege, a fortunate freelancer taking advantage of newly affordable health care (Thanks, Obama!), visiting a doctor for, among other things, PrEP. Picture me. Picture me dashing. I like dashing. Dashing is a good, charismatic word. Picture me stunning if you like. That works to. No complaints.

Anyway. I sat in a brightly lit medical exam room, paper-wrapped table in front of me, ample selection of children’s toys near me (the office had a thriving pediatrics practice) an uncomfortable wire backed chair under me, and a friendly-faced doctor beside me. “Doctor Nameless,” as I shall refer to him, as “Anger Inducing Ignoramus” is too long to repeatedly write of this essay. He’d been typing notes of my visit into his handy medical records terminal.

“Anything else for this visit?” he asked with a smile.

“I’d like to go on PrEP,” I said.

His friendly countenance faded, as dark clouds of concern descended across his brow. “What do you know about PrEP?” he said, the storm building with each word.

I rattled off six months of constant reading: PrEP stood for “Pre Exposure Prophylaxis”, where the drug Truvada is taken daily as a preventative against HIV infection; multiple studies have shown consistent and correct use provides a level of protection against HIV equal to or better than condoms; the side effects of Truvada were generally mild to non-existent in healthy individuals, but still needed to be monitored for safety; that most major insurance carriers now covered the drug; and best of all, from an epidemiological standpoint, Truvada protects against HIV even when people miss a dose.

Hoping for a cookie, Doctor Nameless instead gave me an unexpected response: he said neither he nor any other doctor in his practice would prescribe Truvada for PrEP. He stated Truvada’s protection is uncertain and unproven, it destroys the body, and leads to long term and dangerous health consequences.

“In those studies, scientists don’t even know if it was the Truvada or the condoms that provided the protection people keep quoting,” he said with utter seriousness.

Dafuk? went the 12-year old smart-ass who lives in the back of my head. Did you check to see if he’s actually a doctor and didn’t just borrow a coat from someone golfing —

Yes. Shut up and let me talk, I told that 12-year old smart-ass who lives in the back of my head.

“That’s not what the research shows,” I began. I tried not to sound like a know-it-all. I failed. I always fail in these moment. I do try. Researchers had correlated blood serum levels of Truvada with the preventative effect achieved. It was all about the pills, not the condoms. While I wasn’t an expert on biology, the methodology provided in the journals was powerful stuff. “The research is quite robust,” I finished.

My pushback surprised him. I guess patients usually don’t respond with sentences containing “journal articles”, “blood serum levels”, and “methodology.”

He pivoted the conversation and said Truvada would destroy my kidneys. His words echoed as my mouth had fallen open from utter incredulity, thus providing the perfect acoustic shape between my tounge, throat and teeth for his silliness to bounce and fade, bounce and fade.

Get out. Get out now! Run, dude! Runaway! Again, the 12-year old smart ass who lives in the back of my head.

Know-it-all me engaged Doctor Nameless again. I told him there was little evidence of that in HIV negative people. Some research subjects did have their kidneys work harder, but for most of them, that passed. Very few people in the study had to stop treatment because of a risk of damage. In any event, medical guidelines still mandated monitoring for just that possibility.

Again, not what he was expecting, as our conversation veered into a new, oncoming traffic lane of screeching, beeping, destruction: Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs). “Truvada doesn’t protect against STIs, so it isn’t safer sex,” he said rather definitively.

The headache I mentioned at the top of this essay? This is the exact moment when it started. I remember distinctly. It walked in, said Hey, I’m here. I’ll be your headache for the next few hours. I’m going to start banging around, driving you nuts. I brought friends. I think we’re ordering pizza, too, and got to work causing my head to hurt.



“The perfect can’t be the enemy of the good,” I said to Doctor Nameless, now visibly peeved.

“Condoms don’t protect against all STIs either. And who said anything about using Truvada to protect against other STI? This is about HIV.”

(On the ride home, I realized I should have added that a condom on your cock won’t protect you from an STI in your mouth. Vivid image, right? I blame the headache.)

You might think it ended there, with me peeved, him realizing I’d read some stuff, and the chorus of fictional characters from my over-active imagination having a pizza party while a head-ache throbbed away. Nope. I continued to spar with Doctor Nameless.

“The lab work is expensive!” (My insurance will cover it.)

“What we really need is a vaccine!” (Call me when we have one.)

“Truvada is only right for sex workers!” (I almost said that having sex with my last boyfriend was nothing but work, but I again managed to silence the 12-year old wise ass in me before he took the floor.)

I’d about reached my peak. But I was still hoping, still willing to play another few rounds of That-ain’t-true-about-Truvada ping-pong, in the hopes that maybe I could change his mind, correct his mistakes, or just get to a happy medium.

He served again:

“Truvada will destroy the bone-density of your hips over the next 20 years,” he said. Ping.

“Doc, in 20 years I’ll be 65. Lots of other things could destroy my hips by then.” Pong.

“You could have to get your hip replaced!” Ping.

“I don’t think there’s anything in the research that says that’s likely.” Pong. (I didn’t know a great deal about this one area. Later I’d come to find, surprise, he was wrong on this, too.)

“But you know people who break their hips go into the hospital …and then die!” And he spikes the ball!

I know. I shifted from ping-pong to volley-ball. It seemed apt. Besides, with that comment, he’d done it. He'd reached The Ridiculous Zone and I wasn't interested in boldly going onward, seeking out and exploring new worlds of stupidity, ignorance, and despair. I pulled back. I got quiet. I went to my happy place. Or tried to. The headache was in the way.

"I see I've offended you,” he all but deadpanned.

Ya' think? (That wasn’t the 12-year old wise ass. That was me.)

As if he was dealing with a petulant 12-year old, he shook his head and said that if, after everything he’d mentioned, I still wanted to go on Truvada, he'd run a full battery of tests and require quarterly visits in order to keep the prescription current — the standard treatment that every doctor who prescribes Truvada is supposed to do.

If he’d stopped there, I might have left with some semblance of respect for him. His on-line reviews said he was a good physician, his work history was impressive, and his schedule was always booked with patients. I could have gone off thinking he meant well but just wasn’t right for me.

Alas, he blew it by adding, “And as you destroy your health, I’ll be there for you. We’ll go through it together.”

We’ll be there too, said the throbbing headache (and his friends.)

You know I’m always here, added the wise-ass 12-year old from the back of my mind. He snacked on a slice of the headache’s pizza.

Wanting to salvage something from the visit, and worried that my insurance would force me to see this guy again — that doesn’t happen, but in the moment, that was a concern — I told Doctor Nameless to go ahead and run the tests. I’d deal with everything else later. So he cultured the back of my throat, passed me off to an incredibly nice nurse / vampire who pulled several vials of blood from me for testing. Then I pissed in a cup, stuck a swab up my ass, jammed it in a specimen tube, and left.

Oh, and his office didn’t validate.

In the car, on the way home, I was pissed and angry. That shouldn’t have happened at a top-tier medical group in a big city like Los Angeles. His ignorance and value judgement were being imposed over my own. It struck me also that if I was having these problems, what about people without my same advantages? How are they dealing with such impediments to prevention? I’d heard stories. Now they were real in a far different way.

There was only one thing to do next, one way to achieve clarity, find guidance, and strategize ways to turn this around in order to make things better.

I’d bitch about it on Facebook.

*A former therapist and social worker, Jody Wheeler, M.Ed., M.F.A., is a writer and director in Los Angeles California

Jumat, 15 Mei 2015

[VIDEO] Damon Does PrEP

Damon L. Jacobs shared his PrEP experience with us in March.

Below is the intro to an interview he just did (May 13, 2013) on PrEP with TheBody.com.
As a licensed therapist working with people living with HIV, Damon Jacobs heard about pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as an HIV prevention strategy. When he found himself newly single after being out of the dating game for almost a decade, he re-entered a dating pool that was not at all condom-friendly. To deal with this, and to finally come to terms with his distaste for condoms, Damon began taking PrEP in July 2011 to stay HIV negative.

Now, almost two years later, he's never missed a single dose -- and he's become an advocate for education around PrEP, though he acknowledges that it may not be the right strategy for everyone. From dispelling myths around anti-condom attitudes to advocating that people be able to talk to their doctors about all aspects of their sex life, Damon reminds us that sex isn't dirty, and we can have sexual pleasure, but we have to be smart and know our own bodies.
Read the rest of the interview on TheBody.com. Watch Damon below :)




I wake up; I have my breakfast; I have my vitamins; I have my coffee. That was already an established routine in my adult life. Those are important things I do to take care of myself and start the day right. PrEP was just one thing to add into that. It wasn't anything that was inconvenient. It hasn't been something I've forgotten. It's just with the vitamins now. It's on the same little thing that the vitamins sit on, so I don't forget.

UPDATED NUMBER - 116 Leading HIV/AIDS groups (and allied orgs) endorse CDC HIV PrEP Guidelines

[May 20 update: The current list of sign ons has gone up to 116 - and the list below the letter reflects the new number. Organizations - and now individuals as well - are invited to sign on here.]

 

PrEP is a powerful, additional tool in the AIDS response

Thursday, May 15, 2014 — A group of 69 82 116 leading HIV/AIDS and health organizations HIV/AIDS and health organizations and allies today reiterated their strong support for oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as an important HIV prevention strategy for men and women at risk of HIV infection. The diverse group of advocates, researchers and service providers hailed new HIV PrEP guidelines from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as a science-driven, public health approach to what remains a major health crisis in the United States.

The guidelines come almost two years after the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the oral drug Truvada (TDF/FTC) for HIV prevention following an extensive review of data from multiple, multinational clinical trials of PrEP among men and women with different risks for HIV infection. In the time since FDA approval, the CDC has reviewed additional data and sought input from a range of experts and community members to develop these new guidelines.

The guidelines provide critical information to help healthcare providers and patients evaluate the suitability of oral PrEP as an HIV prevention option and ensure that those who choose PrEP have the support – including ongoing monitoring, counseling, adherence support and frequent HIV and STD testing – necessary for PrEP to be effective.

The group strongly condemns the harmful misrepresentations of the facts and anti-scientific approach to PrEP adopted by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and its president Michael Weinstein. Weinstein continues to make assertions that are not grounded in scientific evidence. We reject statements from all quarters that add to the deep stigma attached to HIV and that erect barriers between people and what they can use to support their health.

Weinstein’s statement that widespread use of PrEP will be accompanied by “a shift to condomless sex” is not based on evidence. In fact, initial studies suggest the opposite, and Weinstein’s assertion underestimates the capacity of informed individuals to make decisions about their health and sex lives. We all must do more to reinvigorate the approach to correct and consistent condom use and underscore that PrEP and condoms are complimentary interventions to the prevention of all STDs, including HIV. But Weinstein's statements fail to recognize that many adults – in the United States and across the world – have not been using condoms consistently or correctly for a host of reasons. PrEP now provides an additional option that also provides significant protection against HIV.

The current scientific evidence clearly indicates that PrEP, when taken daily as directed, can reduce the risk of HIV infection by more than 90 percent. CDC’s PrEP guidelines, like public health guidelines aimed at helping prevent other diseases, outline the support needed to help patients adhere to the daily dosing. The idea of taking a daily pill for prevention is not new: millions of women have successfully taken contraceptive pills to prevent unintended pregnancy, and men and women are able to take a variety of medications to treat or prevent a range of health issues.

The CDC PrEP guidelines underscore that PrEP is not for everyone. Neither CDC nor any of our organizations are advocating for indiscriminate use of PrEP. Neither is anyone suggesting that oral PrEP is a replacement for condoms; rather it is an additional option from which individuals should be able to choose.

PrEP has the potential to help many individuals in the US and around the world protect themselves from HIV. Failure to strategically, effectively and responsibly implement this scientifically sound strategy as part of comprehensive prevention and treatment programs in our fight against HIV would be a true catastrophe. We support the CDC guidelines, and, more importantly, we support the right of informed adults to choose the most appropriate mix of HIV prevention options for their lives as part of truly comprehensive approaches to testing, treatment, care and prevention.

Organizational sign ons: (updated May 20)

30 for 30 Campaign
ACT UP New York
AIDS Action Baltimore
AIDS Action Coalition
AIDS Action Committee
AIDS Alabama
AIDS Alliance for Women, Infants, Children, Youth & Families
AIDS Arms
AIDS Community Research Initiative of America (ACRIA)
AIDS Foundation of Chicago
AIDS Research Consortium of Atlanta
AIDS Resource Center of Wisconsin
AIDS Resource Center Ohio
AIDS Treatment News
AIDS United
American Sexual Health Association
amfAR: The Foundation for AIDS Research
Amida Care
ANAC
Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center
ASPIRA Association
Association of Nurses in AIDS Care
AVAC
Bay Area Perinatal AIDS Center (BAPAC)
Between the Lines Newspaper
Black AIDS Institute
BOOM!Health
Cascade AIDS Project
Center for Health & Gender Equity (CHANGE)
Center for HIV Educational Studies and Training (CHEST), Hunter College, CUNY
Chicago Center for HIV Elimination
Chicago House and Social Service Agency
Chicago Women's AIDS Project
Community Access National Network-CANN
Delaware HIV Consortium
East Bay AIDS Center
End AIDS Now!
Equality Michigan
FHI 360
Friends For Life, Memphis
GAT Portugal
Gay City Health Project
Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC)
Georgia Equality
Harlem United Community AIDS Center
Harm Reduction Coalition
HealthHIV
Hispanic AIDS Forum
HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA)
HIV Prevention Justice Alliance
House of Joe
Housing Works
Howard Brown Health Center
Hyacinth AIDS Foundation
Inova Juniper Program
International Rectal Microbicide Advocates (IRMA)
IV-CHARIS
Justice Resource Institute (JRI)
L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center
Lambda Legal
Lansing Area AIDS Network
Latinos Salud
Legacy Community Health Services
Lifelong
Long Beach AIDS Foundation, Inc.
Los Angeles County PrEP Workgroup
Los Angeles County Public Health Social Justice Caucus
Louisiana AIDS Advocacy Network
Maritime Life Precious Foundation
Minnesota AIDS Project
Mr Friendly
Multicultural AIDS Coalition
Nashville CARES
National Alliance of State & Territorial AIDS Directors (NASTAD)
National Association of County and City Health Officials
National Association of Social Workers
National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, Inc.
National Coalition of STD Directors (NCSD)
National Female Condom Coalition
National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC)
National Women's Health Network
NO/AIDS Task Force
Ohio AIDS Coalition
Pediatric AIDS Chicago Prevention Initiative
Positive Women's Network- USA
PrEP for New York City Task Force
Prepolicious.org
Program for Wellness Restoration
Project Inform
Project PrEPare
Puerto Rican Cultural Center-Vida/SIDA
San Francisco AIDS Foundation
Scott A. Kramer, LCSW
SisterLove
Skills4
Sociologists AIDS Network
Southern AIDS Coalition
Southern HIV/AIDS Strategy Initiative
St. Louis Community PrEP Implementation Project (C-PIP)
START at Westminster
Tennessee Association of People With AIDS
Test Positive Aware Network
The AIDS Institute
The Network for Multidisciplinary Studies on ARV-based HIV Prevention (NEMUS)
The Stigma Project
The Well Project
The Women's Collective
Treatment Access Expansion Project
Treatment Action Group
Urban Coalition for HIV/AIDS Prevention Services (UCHAPS)
US Women & PrEP Working Group
Valley AIDS Information Network Inc.
VOCAL-NY
Whitman-Walker Health
Women With a Vision
Woodhull Sexual Freedom Alliance





Kamis, 14 Mei 2015

CDC/U.S. Public Health Service Release Cinical Guidelines on PrEP for HIV Prevention

This is MAJOR.


Click here for the full guidelines.

CDC's press release (text below)

New guidelines recommend daily HIV prevention pill for those at substantial risk
Could have significant impact on the U.S. epidemic if targeted and used as directed

Health care providers should consider advising the use of anti-HIV drugs by uninfected patients who are at substantial risk of infection, according to new clinical guidelines.

PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, could reduce HIV infection rates. When taken daily as directed, PrEP can reduce the risk of HIV infection by more than 90 percent. Inconsistent use results in much lower levels of protection. 

“HIV infection is preventable, yet every year we see some 50,000 new HIV infections in the United States,” said CDC Director Tom Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. “PrEP, used along with other prevention strategies, has the potential to help at-risk individuals protect themselves and reduce new HIV infections in the United States.”

The guidelines were developed by CDC in partnership with other federal health agencies, public health experts and community leaders.

The guidelines say PrEP should be considered for HIV-uninfected patients with any of the following indications:

•         Anyone who is in an ongoing sexual relationship with an HIV-infected partner.

•         A gay or bisexual man who has had sex without a condom or has been diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection within the past six months, and is not in a mutually monogamous relationship with a partner who recently tested HIV-negative.

•         A heterosexual man or woman who does not always use condoms when having sex with partners known to be at risk for HIV (for example, injecting drug users or bisexual male partners of unknown HIV status), and is not in a mutually-monogamous relationship with a partner who recently tested HIV-negative.

•         Anyone who has, within the past six months, injected illicit drugs and shared equipment or been in a treatment program for injection drug use.

“While a vaccine or cure may one day end the HIV epidemic, PrEP is a powerful tool that has the potential to alter the course of the U.S. HIV epidemic today,” said Jonathan Mermin, M.D., M.P.H., director of CDC’s National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention.  “These guidelines represent an important step toward fully realizing the promise of PrEP.  We should add to this momentum, working to ensure that PrEP is used by the right people, in the right way, in the right circumstances.”

The guidelines offer providers specific advice on how to give people the support they need to take their pills regularly. Given the need for high adherence and the lack of complete protection from HIV with PrEP or any other single strategy, the guidelines encourage providers to promote and support its use in combination with condoms and other proven risk-reduction strategies.  Accompanying the guidelines is a supplement that includes checklists and interview guides to assist clinicians with PrEP prescribing and counseling.

The guidelines build on interim guidance issued by CDC following the release of research findings on PrEP for men who have sex with men (MSM), heterosexuals, and people who inject drugs.  In 2012, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the drug combination of 300 milligrams tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and 200 milligrams emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) for use as PrEP in combination with safer sex practices.

Consistent with FDA labeling, the guidelines stress the importance of HIV testing before PrEP is prescribed and at three-month intervals while a patient is using PrEP.  Regular testing ensures that anyone on PrEP who becomes infected with HIV discontinues PrEP use in order to minimize the risk that the virus could become resistant to the drugs.  Such patients then can begin receiving HIV treatment.

“PrEP is a new approach to HIV prevention that requires continuing collaboration between patients and providers, as effectiveness requires adherence to daily medication and regular medical visits for monitoring, counseling and testing,” said Dawn K. Smith, M.D., M.P.H., the epidemiologist in CDC’s Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention who led the development of the guidelines.  “Individuals will have to decide with their doctor if PrEP is right for them, but for some, this may offer a much-needed strategy to help protect themselves from HIV infection.”

In addition to providing guidelines and tools to assist providers in effectively prescribing and supporting PrEP use, CDC and other organizations are conducting pilot implementation studies and demonstration projects throughout the country.  These projects aim to identify the most effective ways to deliver PrEP in community settings that can reach those at high risk for HIV infection.

The guidelines were announced today in CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.  The 67-page guidelines and 44-page clinical providers’ supplement are published in full here.

 

"Sex is not the enemy, ignorance is" - ButtaFlySouL

Can a Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color?


ButtaFlySouL will be performing at a community talk show on sex, love, and PrEP at Chicago's Center on Halsted - Wednesday, May 22 - reception 6p, show starts 7p.

Popular vlogger Ken Like Barbie  and social guru David Dodd host. Free food. Special guests. Great conversation.

PLEASE JOIN US! All welcome - gay men of color and allies.

Learn more about the event.

Learn more about PrEP.

Rabu, 13 Mei 2015

"The ‘use a condom every time’ message just doesn’t work for everyone..."

Center on Halsted - May 22

“The ‘use a condom every time’ message just doesn’t work for everyone. The goal is to increase protection from HIV – and having more strategies like PrEP in our prevention toolbox can help us achieve that.” - Ken Like Barbie


Popular vlogger Ken Like Barbie (pictured left) and social guru David Dodd are hosting a FREE community talk show - "Can a Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color" - at Center on Halsted in Chicago May 22, from 6p to 9p.

The amazing ButtaFlySouL is performing. Twice.


There will be good food, good conversation - lotsa fun. Will you join us?

Learn more about the event. Learn more about PrEP.

 

Selasa, 12 Mei 2015

Curtis from Chicago - "Truvada is that extra back up that most people need."

http://giveout.razoo.com/story/Aids-Foundation-Of-Chicago

Curtis uses PrEP, a once-a-day pill regimen to help prevent him from getting HIV. It provides an extra layer of safety, so that he can worry less about his sexual health and worry more about school (he's in college) and the stage (he's playing Romeo in an upcoming production of "Romeo and Juliet").

Want to hear Curtis' full story? Visit AIDS Foundation of Chicago's Give Out Day page on May 15. There, you'll have the opportunity to help more people like Curtis become aware of PrEP by making a one-time contribution to AFC. AFC leads the fight against HIV/AIDS by increasing awareness and access for preventive measures like PrEP. Give Out Day is a one-day fundraising drive for organizations that serve America's LGBTQ community.

Can't wait till then? Make a pledge on AFC's Give Out Day page today, and your contribution will be made official on May 15.

Thank you for being on Curtis' side — and on AFC's side. Together, we can increase access to the tools that can put an end to HIV.

AIDS Foundation of Chicago (mother to this blog) believes in the power of PrEP — a revolutionary approach to preventing HIV transmission.

Sabtu, 09 Mei 2015

Just Adding PrEP to the Mix.... Join us May 22 at Center on Halsted

“We’re not throwing condoms out; we’re just adding PrEP to the mix.”
- David Dodd


The very charming duo of David and vlogger Ken Like Barbie are hosting a FREE community talk show - "Can  a Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color" - at Center on Halsted  in Chicago May 22, from 6p to 9p.

The amazing ButtaFlySouL is performing. Twice.

There will be food, fun, good conversation.

Hope to see you there.

Learn more.

Rabu, 06 Mei 2015

[VIDEO] David Dodd and Ken Like Barbie Preview Their May 22 Community Talk Show on PrEP




The details:

Can a Pill Revolutionize Sex for Gay and SGL Men of Color?
Presented by Project RSP!
Wednesday, May 22, 2013 from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Center on Halsted, 3656 North Halsted in Chicago – 3rd floor, Hoover-Leppen Theatre.

Social guru David Dodd and award winning vlogger Ken Like Barbie co-host this event, featuring Vocalist, Poet, Actor and Humorist ButtaFlySouL, star of ButtaFlySouL for President, PrEP researcher Dr. Sybil Hosek from John Stroger Hospital, and a young man of color who is using PrEP.

This event is an all-ages, free community talk show directed to young gay men of color and their allies. From 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. there will be a casual reception with appetizers from Hearty Boys. At 7:00 p.m. the doors to the theatre will open with a performance by ButtaFlySouL. David and Ken will then lead an interactive, lively, and fun discussion with the panelists and audience around sex, love, lust, and a new FDA-approved form of HIV protection called “PrEP” which involves taking a medication every day. ButtaFlySouL will close the program with a second special performance specially created for this event.

 

Minggu, 03 Mei 2015

Mash-up Music Video and Diatribe on "Gay Boy Birth Control"

by MAGPIE SUDDENLY

CREDITS:
Text: Adapted from “My Life on PrEP” by JAKE SOBO

Music mashup: “Smells Like Stayin’ Alive” Juan Martinez/Nirvana/Adam Freeland
By KOBALT


THE KEY

to HOOKING UP online HAS ALWAYS BEEN A
Tricky game You gotta show YOUR BEST ASSETS

To TURN ON

Your audience
Without looking like a DESPERATE SLUT

Never mind that MOST OF US Online Are

a)somewhat DESPERATE

and

b)EXTREMELY promiscuous

it’s all about the FANTASY when it comes to CHATTING online
I favor HONESTY OVER Fantasy
A fact that has COST ME SEX

On a rREGULAR BASIS

I’ve never been ASHAMED of my SEX life or my DESIRES for many guys MY HONESTY is a
DEAL BREAKER TOO MANY GUYS out there are deeply ASHAMED of their sex life

it’s
EMBARRASSING
for them
they’d rather  PRETEND that we’re all just GOOD BOYS who  NEVER hook up

but make an  ‘EXCEPTION’
or two…
(or three…)
(or 3,000….)
on our road to MONGAMY when I first started TAKING TRUVADA as PrEP
(which my friends call
GAY BOY
BIRTH CONTROL)

I thought
SOMEHOW
That it would HELP ME CUT THROUGH SOME
Of the BULL SHIT OUT THERE
I could FINALLY HAVE

The kind of
SEX I WANTED
Without SHAME
Or  REGRET
Or GETTING HIV

I supposed I was NAÏVE
Just a few DAYS  AGO
Some guy online
Was Complaining
That only  WHORES
Were lining up to Take TRUVADA

He said:
“Having a THERE’S-A-PILL-FOR-THAT
Attitude…
…is absolutely
DISGUSTING”

I found myself FACE-to-FACE
With the same kind of
SHAMING And  PRETENDING That has PLAGUED HIV PREVENTION
Since the  BEGINNING
This approach to SEX Is just ANOTHER VERSION
Of the
SEXUAL SHAME
You see online

It’s the same
STIGMA
That leads MANY GAY MEN
To
NOT GET TESTED
To NOT DISCUSS
HIV with sex partners
To pretend like onlyWHORES Get HIV …which NEVER includes YOU or ME
Or the guy who CAME in my ASS LAST NIGHT
It’s what’s DRIVING  PLENTY Of INFECTIONS

TRUVADA as PrEP
Can help STOP THOSE INFECTIONS

But dangerously MISINFORMED HATERS SHAME
Gay men Into PRETENDING like THEY DON’T
NEED IT That they are just
“GOOD BOYS” WHO MAKE ‘EXCEPTIONS”
every now and again
taking
TRUVADA as PrEP
doesn’t make me A WHORE
I refuse to feel
DIRTY
Or
ASHAMED
Of the sex I have

TRUVADA as PrEP
Helps keep ne HIV-negative
IT CAN KEEP YOU
HIV-negative too
START  ASKING
For it

LET’S QUIT
The WHORE-BAITING
And start the REAL WORK Of PREVENTION

Remember:
YOU HAVE THE KEY
To your
SEXUAL HEALTH
PrEP
PrOTECT
YOUrSELF


Sabtu, 02 Mei 2015

PrEP – What have I done to deserve this? (Part 3 of 3)

This is the third and final installment of a three-part series. Click here to read the first installment. Click here to read the second installment.

I’ve been told that I can look forward to a tremendous reduction in stress and anxiety about seroconverting. I look forward to that. We’ll see. 


bv Marc-André LeBlanc
Gatineau, Canada

On April 5, 2013 I took my first dose of Truvada as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). I won’t deny it. I’ve been feeling very conflicted about starting PrEP.

 
Why do I have access to Truvada when the majority of people who need antiretroviral medication to stay alive don’t have access? I got my hands on this bottle relatively easily. The social injustice is not lost on me. I don’t have relatively easy access to this medication because I deserve it more than anyone else.

So what HAVE I done to deserve access to PrEP? Well, a lot of it is sheer luck, actually.

•    Nearly every time I see the news, I am amazed at how lucky I am. I was born in Canada. Talk about winning the lottery. Out of 7 billion people, I am one of only 34 million people living in Canada. Trust me, it’s a great place to live!

•    I’ve been working in HIV for 20 years, including the last 10 years focussed on tracking biomedical HIV prevention research. This provides me with ongoing access to the latest information.

•    I make a good living. I can access healthcare relatively easily and generally for free or at a cost that has little impact on my standard of living.

•    I have a doctor. He’s young (My age. That’s young. Shut up.), gay, and sees a lot of people living with HIV in his practice. So talking to him about my sex life and about PrEP was not difficult. He keeps up to date on research. After a good discussion, he agreed to prescribe PrEP.

•    Not only do I live in Canada, but I live in Québec, the only province to have a universal public drug plan. As long as the drugs my doctor prescribes are on the provincial drug formulary, I am covered for most of the cost. I pay $500 into the drug plan annually, and PrEP will cost me less than $1,000/year on top of that. And if I ever need other drugs for any reason, I will not pay for them. Because $992/year ($82.66/month to be precise) is the most I would have to pay for all my drugs combined.

I’m not trying to be disingenuous. I know that beyond being lucky and privileged, I have access to PrEP because I’ve taken some very concrete steps as well. I did lots of introspection. I tried to reduce my risk as much as possible through other means. I did a lot of research. I actively sought out access. I make sure I’m very diligent about taking my pills.

I always have been very diligent about that. I take all my antibiotics when I need them. I take vitamins daily. When I was on antidepressants, I never missed a dose in 1.5 years. I follow advice from medical professionals to the letter. Case in point: I’ve needed physiotherapy twice. Both times, the conversation during my second visit went something like this:
Physiotherapist: Wow, you’re made remarkable progress in one week. I’ve never seen anyone progress so quickly with this type of injury. Which exercises did you do?
Me: All of them, like you showed me.
PT: You did ALL the exercise I gave you?! How often?
Me: Every day, like you told me.
PT: You did ALL your exercise EVERY day?! How many times a day?
Me: Twice, like you told me.
PT: You did ALL your exercises, EVERY day, TWICE a day?! I’ve never seen this in all my years of practice! No wonder you’re doing so well!

*SLAP* You’re at risk of HIV!



I might make jokes, but I don’t take this lightly.

Every morning when I wake up it’s the first thing I think about. That might stop after a while. But two weeks into taking PrEP, it’s the same thing. I wake up, and as I ponder about whether I want to go back to sleep again for a little longer, I can’t do it. I immediately think: when I get up I have to take my Truvada pill. Because I’m at risk of HIV.

Each and every time I open the cupboard and grab the bottle, I think: how is it possible that I am so lucky to have such easy access to this medication when millions of people who need it to stay alive don’t have access?

Who needs a coffee? I get a slap in my face every morning. Two of them in fact.

*SLAP* You’re at risk of HIV and STIs!


*SLAP* You’re one of the lucky few who has access to this medication and to this prevention option!


I’ve been told that I can look forward to a tremendous reduction in stress and anxiety about seroconverting. I look forward to that. We’ll see. I’m not there yet by any stretch. But at least I get some measure of comfort from knowing that I’m putting chances on my side by reducing my risk as much as I can in my current situation. Doing my best to stay healthy seems like the right thing to do to honour those who don’t have access to this drug.

***

There are a million other things I have to say about PrEP. Well OK, maybe only half a million. But luckily others have already addressed many of them, and have done it so eloquently. I encourage everyone to check out the following remarkable first-person accounts:

• Len Tooley did a series of interviews on PositiveLite.
• Jake Sobo has been writing a whole series of articles on his blog, “My Life on PrEP”.
• Several other first-person accounts can be found right here on the “My PrEP Experience” blog.

Len and Jake are so friggin’ smart and insightful and articulate, I want to marry both of them. It has been a tremendous source of help and support to read the thoughts of everyone who shared their stories publicly. A big hairy thanks to Jim Pickett for starting the “My PrEP Experience” blog because he recognized that amidst all the heated debates and discussions and policy decisions about PrEP, we weren’t hearing the voices of real-life flesh-and-blood people actually using PrEP.