Colored pencil drawing of a couple kissing on a dirt path in front of a body of water, across which is the outline of a city

For Keeps: Teenage Girls and Anxiety around Sex during the 1990s

Two women holding each others' hands chatting, in a bright room

Deconstructing HIV and AIDS on The Golden Girls

A poster: Which woman should get an HIV test? All of them. A group of women at different ages in the center of the poster

Gender, Health, & Marginalization: National Responses to HIV/AIDS in the U.S. and Jamaica

Photograph of two white hands holding an ora quick HIV test.

A Few Things I Need You To Know Before Getting Tested for HIV, As Told By Your HIV Tester

A grey building in the background, flanked by two red-brick buildings, and a street lined by concrete posts.

The Second Sentence: AIDS in Dublin’s Mountjoy Prison

HIV in Brazil: Health and Human Rights in a Global Context

Love and Rage

Bill Maher, Charlie Sheen, and Modern Day Snake Oil

The University of Nottingham's LGBT society holds a demonstration "donation not discrimination" against the National Blood Service's discrimination against gay and bisexual men, who are banned from giving blood.

Stay Positive: A Radical Alternative to the Gay Blood Ban

PrEP, The Pill, and the Fear of Promiscuity.

By Ian Lekus

The first I learned of PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, came from the signs and postcards around Fenway Health, Boston’s LGBT community health center. Those advertisements appeared as Fenway served as one of two U.S. research sites for PrEP, in advance of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approving Truvada in July 2012 as the first drug deemed safe and effective for reducing the risk of HIV transmission.[1] As I started learning more, I quickly discovered how its advocates frequently compare PrEP to oral contraceptives. One PrEP researcher I consulted with early on in my investigations explicitly drew the parallel to her decision to use the Pill a few years earlier. Some of the similarities jump out immediately: for example, like oral contraceptives, PrEP — a pill taken daily to prevent HIV infection — separates prevention from the act of sexual intercourse itself.