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Prep4All now - support equal access to HIV prevention drug for everyone
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PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) prevents people getting HIV and is almost 100% effective when taken as prescribed. It provides protection to the many people who continue to be vulnerable to HIV, both in the UK and around the world. The drug has been proven to be cost effective when measured against the cost of lifelong HIV treatment and care.

PrEP has already had an impact on HIV rates in the UK, with Public Health England clear that PrEP, alongside other HIV combination prevention interventions, has played a part in reducing HIV transmission – particularly among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM).

But PrEP has the potential to do so much more - to be the driving force behind England meeting the target of ending new HIV transmissions by 2030.

Yet there are major obstacles in the way of this potential.

PrEP can be an important HIV prevention tool for many people at risk of HIV. From gay and bisexual men, to women, Black African and other ethnic minority communities, and trans people.

Yet these communities are currently not equally benefiting from PrEP.

While awareness and uptake of PrEP in gay and bisexual men is high (but could always be higher), HIV Prevention England has found that Black African men and women are less likely to know about PrEP and may have misconceptions about what it means, who it is for and how to access it. This is despite making up 44% of new heterosexual HIV diagnoses in 2018 [pdf].

This is not equality. This is not enabling all those who could benefit from PrEP being able to equally access it.

Between 2018 and 2019, a PrEP Commissioning Planning Group was established, jointly chaired by NHS England and the Association of Directors of Public Health and reporting to the Impact Trial PrEP Oversight Board. The group drafted a document: “Preparing for the commissioning of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) in England: Recommendations of the PrEP Commissioning Planning Group”. This document was not published, yet it includes important recommendations around ensuring equitable access to PrEP in England that we believe the Government must address.

The burden of HIV is not evenly distributed, nor is the use of PrEP as a method of HIV prevention. The principle of equity – across different risk and demographic groups, and geographically – must be evident throughout routinely commissioned PrEP programmes: from knowledge and creating demand in at-risk individuals (e.g. via targeted health promotion programmes), to access, to uptake, to use, and importantly, in outcomes. In line with this principle, provision of various aspects of PrEP must be proportionate to need.

  • A national HIV PrEP programme affords the opportunity to champion equality throughout the delivery of PrEP and strengthen relationships not only with gay and bisexual men but especially other groups at high risk of HIV acquisition who may not otherwise engage with sexual health services.
  • A national HIV PrEP programme must go beyond the provision of drugs and adopt a whole system approach which, focusing on individual rights and choice, identifies those at risk of HIV who could benefit from PrEP but who are not accessing it currently; helps those at risk to identify appropriate prevention options; and supports their journey along it.
  • A national PrEP programme must also understand and seek to address the structural inequalities that drive inequity in PrEP access. These include working to address community-level, socio-economic and cultural factors.
  • To be effective, the comprehensive PrEP programme will need a novel, innovative approach (not just ‘continue’ or ‘within the current’); for activities to occur both within and outside specialist sexual health services where PrEP will be delivered and be undertaken by community organisations and non-GU clinicians.
  • Costs of introducing PrEP must include the need for enhanced community mobilisation and engagement, especially for Black African men and women, women of other ethnicities, trans people, younger and BME GBMSM groups, and other underserved groups. It must also focus on increasing awareness of PrEP in young people.

The need for additional pathways to ensure equity of access should consider primary care (including non-traditional delivery e.g. app-based provision of GP services), maternity, and termination of pregnancy services. These services must be co-designed with communities to examine the acceptability of potential pathways to be commissioned as well as looking at delivery. As the national PrEP guidance from BASHH and BHIVA states, “limiting provision of PrEP to level 3 sexual health clinics risks widening health inequalities disproportionately among black, Asian, and minority ethnic (BAME) populations.”

National and local health promotion activity must address the need for additional information on PrEP to facilitate equity of access.

We also support the PrEP Commissioning Planning Group’s recommendation that a national PrEP Equity Audit tool should be used to ensure that no communities are being left behind in accessing PrEP.

For too long, access to PrEP has not been even. With the current roll out of routinely commissioned PrEP, action must be taken to ensure that all who can benefit from PrEP are aware of it and can access it.

Inequity in access to PrEP is not acceptable.

Signatures

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Ian Green, Chief Executive, Terrence Higgins Trust

Deborah Gold, Chief Executive, National AIDS Trust

Will Nutland, Co-founder, PrEPster

Amanda Ely, Chief Executive, CHIVA

Michelle Ross, Co-founder, cliniQ

Deryck Browne, Chair, One Voice Network

Sophie Strachan, Director, Sophia Forum

Denis Onyango, Programmes Director, Africa Advocacy Foundation

Edwin Sesange, Director, Africa Equality Foundation

Maureen Ndawana, Community Engagement Officer, The Africa Health Policy Network

Amdani Juma, Partnership and Community Director, African Institute for Social Development

Jeni Hirst, Director of Service Development and Delivery, BHA for Equality

Emma Colyer MBE, Director, Body & Soul Charity

Rami Ghali, Chief Executive Officer, Brigstowe

Dr John McSorley, President, British Association for Sexual Health and HIV

Dr Laura Waters, Chair, British HIV Association

Helen Marshall, Chief Executive, Brook

John McKernaghan, Chief Officer, The Brunswick Centre

Toni Jacobs, Director, Derby Pride CIO

Ryan Whittington, Manager, Derbyshire LGBT+

Destitute Asylum Seekers Huddersfield

Mags Davies, Chief Executive, The Eddystone Trust

Anne Aslett. Global Chief Executive Officer, Elton John AIDS Foundation

Mesfin Ali, Health Services Manager, Embrace UK Community

Faculty of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare

Siobhán Lanigan, Chief Executive, The Food Chain

Darren Knight, Chief Executive, George House Trust

Nadia Naous, Chair, HIV Pharmacy Association

Jide Macaulay, Founder & CEO, House Of Rainbow

Simon Collins, Advocate, HIV i-Base

Greg Owen, Co-founder, iwantPrEPnow

Pip Gardner, Chief Executive, The Kite Trust

Paul Martin OBE, Chief Executive, LGBT Foundation

Ian Howley, Chief Executive, LGBT HERO

Simon Jones, CEO, Living Well International CIC

Monty Moncrieff MBE, Chief Executive, London Friend

Melanie Tranter, Chair, The Make A Difference Trust

Tom Doyle, Chief Executive, Yorkshire MESMAC Group of Services

Dr Greg Ussher, CEO, METRO Charity

Matthew Hodson, Executive Director, NAM aidsmap

Shaun Watson, Chair, National HIV Nurses Association

Parminder Sekhon, Interim CEO, Naz Project London

Chris Williams, Service Lead, Plushealth

Mark Santos, Director, Positive East

Silvia Petretti, Chief Executive, PositivelyUK

Anthony West, Specialist Support Manager (Sexual Health), Renaissance UK

Chris Woolls, Director, River House Trust

Tessa Willow, Chief Executive, Sahir House

Tom Hayes, Trustee, Saving Lives UK

Laina Cores, National Director, Sexpression:UK

Karen Skipper, CEO, Spectra

Nancy Kelley, Chief Executive, Stonewall

Sarah Macadam, CEO, Thames Valley Positive Support

Salim Khalifa, Director, Trade Sexual Health

Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, Executive Director and Co-Founder, UK Black Pride

Alex Sparrowhawk, Chair, UK-CAB, the HIV treatment advocates network

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Individuals

Takudzwa Mukiwa

Neil Reavey

Ralf Rasmussen

Christopher Spelman

Jacob Livingstone

Sam Mercadante

Rainer Jurkat

Paul Hayward

Serena Cavanagh

Dr Vanessa Crawford

Aled Osborne

Samuel Isaacs

Liam Watson

Joanna Shepherd

Adam Pace

Matt Clee

Emma  Zurowski

Kia Hinds

India Henry

Victoria Walton

Matthew James Walsh

Michaela Walsh

David E Smith

Wai Ming Lee

Matthew Hughes

Ryan Seville

Hayley Morrison

Adrian Machel

Selina Whiteley

Martin Harris

Amanda Floyd

Dennis Macalino

Wiebke Koeppen

Karen Freer

Maria Cacho

Sarah Jones

Christian Ratcliffe

Paul Taylor

Kathryn Bristow

David Mawson

Owen Blacker

Keith Kent

Jonathan shearn

Jason Lew

Jack Gomm

Emily Fisher

Beren Maddison

Rensa Gaunt

Emma Mendes da Costa

Susannah Osmond

Patrick Fitzpatrick

Jack Taylot

Hannah Pittman

Arron Carr

Sharon Tyler

Ria Patel

George Pope

Kieran Scholtz

James Mitchell

Liam Swanston

Jamie Hinkley

Eleanor Griffin

Dave West

Scarlett Ballantine

Caroline Robinson

Kaden Foley

Casey Knight

Richard Hodgson

Shiv Smith

Kate Gray

Spencer Blackwell

Catherine Muxworthy

Jack Howell

Elizabeth Hawke

Adanyina Wemuye Ernest

Gareth Roberts

Mark Shields

Gillian Price

Liam Beattie

Dr Anthony Drummond

Daniel Gomez

Ewan Hindes

Emma Kosmin

Ralph Bogard

Shellie Hullah

Quentin Yeung

Ed Firth

Shang-Yu Lee

Lucie Hannah Cox

Christopher Brown

Felicia Bamgbose

Anna Bonsall

Rachel Cotton

Ryan Montgomery

Sarah Phillips

Dr Ellen Welch

Joe Vincent

Hanno Hinkelbein

Martha Dunkley

George Aristotelous

Andrii Chernyshev

Sarah Gosling

Ryan Westwell

Ashley Brown

Christian Mercer

Christopher Owen-Brooks

Giugiu Barsuola

Hugh Tonks

Alison McCants

Kathryn Wolf

Abigail Toni Weiler-Grove

Neil Fever

Ralph Beardmore

Raymand Mallare

Laura Beck

Stewart O'Callaghan

Laura Ferrara

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