Thursday, January 16, 2025
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In US, gay men clash over HIV prevention pill

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WASHINGTON: A single daily pill may help prevent HIV. And in America, gay men who have lost countless loved ones to AIDS can’t stop fighting about it.

Much of the debate has played out on the Internet and social media as tempers flare over promiscuity, erratic condom use and the potential to either eliminate or worsen the stubborn HIV/AIDS epidemic, which has killed 36 million people worldwide in the past three decades.

The drug in question is Truvada, an oblong blue pill that combines two antiretroviral medications — tenofovir and emtricitabine.

“In the medical community, this is more of a controversial, divisive issue than I ever thought it would be,” said Ray Martins, chief medical officer at the Whitman-Walker Clinic.

Martins told AFP a month’s supply of pills costs between $1,200 and $2,000, which is usually covered by health insurance. Side effects are rare but can include nausea, bloating and diarrhea.

Made by Gilead Sciences in California, Truvada was already available as a medication for HIV-positive patients when it was approved by US regulators in 2012 as a prevention strategy for people who are HIV-negative but engage in sex with HIV-positive partners, or who inject drugs.

On Wednesday, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued its first formal guidelines for doctors, urging them to recommend the prevention pill for patients at substantial risk of getting HIV. The daily pill should be used in conjunction with condoms as a way to cut back on new HIV infections, which have stayed steady at some 50,000 new annual cases in the United States in recent years, officials said.

“This is a position I fear the CDC will come to regret,” said Michael Weinstein, president of the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

Weinstein predicted the guidelines “will likely have catastrophic consequences in the fight against AIDS in this country.”

He has also described Truvada as a “party drug,” sparking a fresh wave of angst among supporters of pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, whereby healthy people take antiretrovirals as a way to prevent HIV infection.

AHF spokesman Ged Kenslea said Truvada is available in AHF’s pharmacies, and that the group does not oppose PrEP if a doctor and patient agree it could be useful in a given situation.

“The government’s wholesale endorsement, we believe, is dangerous and will result in needless new infection,” Kenslea explained.

Human nature, the inability to take pills daily even among the most responsible adults, and the rise in syphilis among gay men are all reasons cited for concern. The backlash against Truvada — the only pill presently approved for HIV prevention — has led some gay men to speak out in favor of it, even describing themselves online as “Truvada whores” in a tongue-in-cheek gesture.

One of them is Bradley, 28, a San Francisco technology worker who tweets as @TruvadaWhore and asked that his last name not be published.

“I am adamantly against slut shaming and policing of people’s consensual behavior,” he said in an interview. “PrEP may not work for or be accessible to everyone, but I want to celebrate its effectiveness and fight stigma.” (Agencies)

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