HIV-prevention efforts targeted at people already infected with the virus should be considered “a public health priority” according to an editorial by a group of US public health and HIV doctors in the April 2003 edition of the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections.
As only infected people can pass on HIV, the editorial maintains, “prevention efforts should be identified for those living with HIV”. The writers highlight three reasons why prevention efforts should be focused on people already diagnosed with HIV: evidence that at least a third of HIV-positive people have unprotected anal or vaginal sex; to improve the health of HIV-positive people by reducing the amount of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) they have; and, as STIs can make a person with HIV more infectious, reducing their prevalence in people with HIV will help reduce the spread of HIV itself.
The authors also highlight the risk of people with HIV being superinfected with HIV from unprotected sex.
Although the authors point to the “diverse array of biological, developmental, relational, social, psychological, cultural and environmental influences that underlie the adoption and maintenance of sexual risk or protective behaviour”, they highlight HAART as an “emergent” risk factor, leading to a “propensity” for HIV-positive people to have unprotected sex.
HIV prevention efforts should be enhanced, access to treatments expanded, and HIV prevention integrated into clinical management, the authors suggest. The social problems often faced by HIV-positive people are also highlighted, as potential barriers to prevention work, as are the “mosaic” of subgroups that the virus affects.
Criticising the antipathy towards HIV which has emerged in richer countries since the emergence of HAART, the authors call for urgent action, concluding “this is the time for a swift, determined and coordinated response; our passivity will only…perpetuate the HIV epidemic.”
HIV prevention work in the UK targeted at HIV-positive gay men can be viewed on the websites of the Terrence Higgins Trust and GMFA. For studies on whether HAART “optimism” is associated with an increase in unprotected sex see the links below.
Further information on this website
Sexual health - factsheets
Gay men realistic, not optimistic about HAART - news story
San Francisco HIV prevention campaign highlights side-effects - news story
The darkside of HAART optimism? More unsafe sex and poor adherence - news story
Safer sex fatigue and HAART optimism explain rise in US bareback sex - news story
Di Clemente RJ et al. Prevention interventions for HIV positive individuals. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 39: 393–395, 2003.