In 1995, I was sixteen and experiencing the excitement of my first real love. As if out of a 1990s […]
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In 1995, I was sixteen and experiencing the excitement of my first real love. As if out of a 1990s […]
In 1990, the much-beloved sitcom, The Golden Girls — a show about four older women, Rose, Blanche, Dorothy, and Sophia, […]
After conducting Fulbright research on the cultural politics of HIV/AIDS in Jamaican women’s lives, I became interested in exploring how […]
Welcome! Before getting tested for HIV, New York State requires me to go over a few things with you. First, […]
In January 1986, Irish current affairs program Today Tonight reported on a spate of deaths and attempted suicides in Dublin’s […]
The fight over the future of the ACA here in the U.S. has made me think about universal healthcare, disease, […]
On November 2, 1992, members of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) carried a dead body through the […]
Bill Maher has done the impossible: he’s fallen farther in my esteem. There was a time (high school) when I […]
In December last year, the FDA lifted its longtime policy of deferring any blood or tissue donations coming from men […]
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.
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