Tag Archive | "medicine"

The Other Blue Pill

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ALEX VAUGHN

There is a new blue pill that is set to revolutionize our attitudes towards HIV and safe sex. I’d even go as far as to say that this pill will make us question the entire idea of sexual responsibility. The pill is Truvada PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) and it is already available in a pharmacy near you.

Truvada has been widely used in the treatment of HIV positive individuals. However, as early as this year, the FDA is poised to approve the drug as a means to prevent infection. The Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) already have in place a set of guidelines for using this pill as a prevention method against HIV.

In theory, this little blue pill has the potential to do as much harm as good, just like Viagra has. Of course with Viagra the situation is markedly different. As with all medications, Viagra comes with side effects and warning labels. It isn’t, or shouldn’t be, a daily pill. There is no regime to be followed. There is also a completely different mindset attached to it. Viagra is not a preventative health aide; Truvada is.

The studies shown to determine the effectiveness of the pill as a preventative method were favorable, obviously leading to the FDA’s considerations. The variables and conditions to its success, however, are many and they are all relevant. The fear of course is those concerns will fall to the wayside when we are discussing the simplicity of one blue pill to protect you from the worst contagious disease affecting the community and the world.

When taken daily, Truvada had been shown to be 95% effective at preventing infection with HIV. Those who did become infected during the trial period were shown to not have enough of the drug in their systems indicating that these subjects did not adhere to the daily regime.

The study has clearly shown that one must be completely strict with the one-aday regime. Unlike Viagra, Truvada is not a “pop it on the weekend” sort of recreational drug. It is a lifestyle choice. With multiple partners and promiscuity, protection will not exist if one only pops a pill before hitting the hay.

In addition, the studies indicate that the best role for this pill is in relationships that are serodiscordant. Meaning one partner has HIV and the other doesn’t. In this situation, adherence is more likely as there is a strong mutual desire for protection.

Furthermore Truvada is not something you can pick up from a buddy with a party supply kit. It simply won’t work. You need to consult with an HIV specialist and determine whether it is for you, while noting that this is not a 100% protection against HIV.

Sex, as pleasurable as it is, comes with other risks, syphilis, HEP and a host of nearly 12 million other STDS. Truvada doesn’t protect you from any of these. Only condoms will.

This is undoubtedly a great step forward and an amazing change to the landscape of sexual interaction between partners of mismatched status. In addition with the hope that it remains successful, it will help breakdown prejudices towards HIV+ people.

That said, the danger of unleashing such a powerful statement into the community is astronomical. The reality is that the warnings are going to get lost in the simple message of “one little pill for HIV protection.” There will be many responsible people who will research, try, test and get to grips with this pill. There are more who will breathe a sigh of relief and pop a pill before they do the deed and think nothing of it.

This will also go a step to downgrade HIV further, from a dangerous and life threatening disease with potential complications to a totally manageable disease. After all, how bad can it be if you can prevent it with a little blue pill? The real danger is that this disease will no longer be seen as manageable with side effects, but rather as no big deal at all.

As HIV infections continue to rise in Florida, the need for prevention is undoubtedly present and the message needs to be loud and clear. Though the study was quick to indicate that condoms were offered free of charge and that their use in studies had increased, the reality is who will bear that in mind. If you are less than strict with your condom use, are you really going to become more stringent when you know you’ve popped a pill?

This “pop a pill” mentality is found not only within the community, but in the nation as a whole. You can’t watch TV for more that 20 seconds before some pill is being advertised, for something or other, from depression to restless leg syndrome.

Add the prospect of another pill, and it doesn’t faze or frighten everyone. It, in fact, makes life so much easier. Why worry about condoms or status when you just need to remember to pop a little pill everyday?

The flip side is that despite the fact that you are not sick, you are providing your body with a medication to which it may react badly, and all to avoid a condom? There is also the question of what happens if you do maintain the treatment, yet still fall into the 5% that contract the virus anyway. Have you screwed yourself ? Will your body have built a tolerance to one of the most widely used treatments for HIV?

It has been noted by the study’s doctors that resistance cannot develop with the use of this pill since actual infection has not taken place. However condoms remain the main protector. Unfortunately, at the same time, the same doctors noted that many people had already stopped using condoms. Truvada would offer another protection route.

The coverage of one-a-day medications complete with the shiny happy people on the HIV medication adverts suggests that life goes on. This has allowed a generation who never experienced the 80’s to have a blasé attitude to the disease. The real danger is that lost amid the excitement of the availability of Truvada, the horror of AIDS will be forgotten.

 

 

Alex Vaughn is the Editor-in-Chief of the Florida Agenda. He can be reached at editor@FloridaAgenda.com

Pounding the marble floors of Congress

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HIV/AIDS Patients living in fear that they will

soon lose access to their lifesaving HIV-medications

MICHAEL EMANUEL RAJNER, BSW (Photo)

I am in Washington, D.C. to attend an event celebrating the successful repeal of an age old ban prohibiting the use of federal funds for syringe-exchange programs and to also honor the amazing contributions of those involved in the effort.

The visit to Washington, D.C. is planned to be a joyful one, but as I prepare for the trip, I could not help but pack my schedule with visits with members of Congress and their staff as the sky continues to fall for some people living with HIV/AIDS.

While I will be there to celebrate and honor the work of great activists to repeal a ban based on ideology and not science, I will also be pounding the marble floors of Congress and serve as a voice to calling on members of Congress to provide $126 million in emergency funding for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP).

With the passing of each day, more and more people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States are living with increasing fear that they will soon lose access to their lifesaving HIV-medications as our nation continues to struggle with its economy. Ten states (Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Montana, North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming) have capped enrollment of their ADAP and established waiting lists with more than 1,000 people waiting for access to their lifesaving medications.

As states continue to slash AIDS program budgets and leave some of their most economically vulnerable residents on the cutting room floor, the number of people waiting for access is quickly expected to soar beyond the 2004 record of 1,629 people on waiting lists. As this crisis continues to plague our nation, we’re reminded that America has AIDS and despite medications people are still dying while public health programs are operating at capacity and fail to be funded at the levels to sustain the actual need.

Pharmaceutical advertisements of an HIV+ person climbing a mountain only clouds the issue and doesn’t show the daily struggle of many lives in dire need to secure medications, yet they have no accessible means. In the case of South Carolina, for three people with HIV/AIDS the ADAP wait list once again defined HIV/AIDS as a death sentence. Three residents of South Carolina have already perished as the state fails to respect every life and ignores the basic needs of their lowincome residents.

Back in November 20, 2006, I participated in a demonstration in Columbia, South Carolina to demand their state legislature adequately fund their state’s ADAP as hundreds of impoverished residents living with HIV/AIDS went without the most basic of lifesaving medications. At the time I served as the national secretary for the Campaign to End AIDS (C2EA) and drove up from Fort Lauderdale.

Caravans from neighboring states found refuge for a good night’s sleep on a church floor. In the morning, the army that gathered would take to the streets and marched to stand by their forgotten brothers and sisters.

Two weeks later, I remember speaking on stage in New Orleans at NAPWA’s once annual conference, ‘Staying Alive.’ When speaking to the audience of nearly 500 people living with HIV/AIDS from around the county, I knew then I’d found my voice as I called on a segment of the HIV/AIDS community to take action while on their daily struggle with this insidious virus.

Just before I was invited to the stage, Reverend Charles King called Karen Bates of South Carolina and told her to listen; he then put up his BlackBerry so she can hear her community – a family united by despair – respond to the call to action. As I spoke with anger and despair in my voice, I was clear to remind each person in that room of their duty to themselves and their peers.

There was a time when LGBT organizations were on the front line demanding our government respond to the needs of dying gay men.

Defying social norms, segments of our community motivated by compassion and the need for every person to die with dignity engaged in direct actions involving civil disobedience. For many who engaged, they had a friend or loved one who was at home and probably forgotten by their family. Others may not have had a personal experience of someone struggling, they just knew they needed to get out there and fight for others.

Over the next few weeks I will be following the struggle that over 1,000 people living with HIV/AIDS are having while on a waiting list for their lifesaving medications. Stay tuned and ready to respond to a ‘call for action!’

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