My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

Why is PrEP not available widely on the NHS?

55 replies

prapest · 15/03/2019 20:06

The stuff can prevent catching HIV and all the awful side effects.

It is dropping rapidly in price and so should be widely available on the NHS.
Sure money is tight, but if contraception such as the pill, condoms, implants etc are provided on the NHS, why isn’t PrEP?

OP posts:
Report
Fortybingowings · 15/03/2019 21:34

It is in Wales.

Report
Dramatical · 15/03/2019 21:36

And Scotland

Report
KylieKoKo · 15/03/2019 21:36

A couple of my friends have been prescribed this too. On the nhs.

Report
Divgirl2 · 15/03/2019 21:58

What do you mean by "widely available"? It's hardly side effect free, and the chances of the majority of people contracting HIV are vey very slim.

Report
oneforthepain · 15/03/2019 22:12
Hmm
Report
prapest · 16/03/2019 03:00

Typical mumsnet responses, women only.

OP posts:
Report
MummySharkBabyShark · 16/03/2019 03:06

Local sexual health clinic (in England) supplies of here.

Report
LaurenOrdering · 16/03/2019 03:12

I'm sorry but why should PrEP be available to people who can't be bothered to use condoms when they have sex? The NHS is strapped for cash as it is.

Report
Dramatical · 16/03/2019 06:20

Typical mumsnet responses, women only.

Eh?

Report
prapest · 16/03/2019 06:33

Lauren, then why does the NHS supply the pill? Surely you can use a condom instead?

OP posts:
Report
AwakeAfterMidnight · 16/03/2019 06:35

Lauren - maybe prevention is cheaper than treatment?

Report
Prequelle · 16/03/2019 06:37

Because the pill prevents another HUMAN from being made. It benefits the majority.

No I don't think it should be available widespread. When we are struggling to fund vital treatments already. There are cut backs left right and centre. Hard decisions are being made at the moment about what we can and can't deliver and I expect more people are going to be in for a shock in the coming years. It's a sad state of affairs but the NHS has become a victim of its own success and now people expect EVERYTHING but it's just not affordable

Report
flumpybear · 16/03/2019 06:44

Quick internet search shows one brand is $2k per month supply

Report
mindutopia · 16/03/2019 06:50

I work in sexual health. I would say it’s several reasons. One I think is financial. NHS England is quite cautious about commissioning any new services (not the same as Wales and Scotland, though the areas and populations they cover are hugely different). One bit of it is trepidation still I think about what would happen if the broader use of antiretrovirals led to viral resistance. This is unlikely but a truly nightmare scenario. The science of HIV prevention has moved so rapidly in recent years that I think for some it’s still quite scary to think what if we’re doing something wrong, with methods only tested in very short term trials.

The rest is probably political. Imagine the stories in the Daily Fail (and there have already been some) about all these irresponsible people having sex....just like all the other irresponsible people who already have sex every day and get chlamydia or have an unwanted pregnancy. Hmm Of course, it doesn’t stop us providing free birth control, rightly so.

That said, more PrEP places are opening up. I think my clinic is getting another 700 or so. So it’s there, just not for everyone just yet (of course, I don’t expect it will ever be just for everyone, you will have to demonstrate need, which is good probably to weed out the low risk health anxiety folks). There is also the private market, though accessible only to some. There was a community based pill testing service (in London only) that would test pills bought privately for quality, which was better than nothing, though obviously still points out the glaring issues with an unregulated private market.

I do think we’ll see big changes soon, if politically the NHS gets a bit of a boost with funds. Magic promises Brexit windfall please? Hmm

Report
scaevola · 16/03/2019 06:50

PrEP is already avaioable to high risk individuals on NHS

I'm not quite sure what it is that you want? Different risk parameters? If so what do you want them to be?

(other than to rapidly turn to misogynist slurs)

Report
Unfinishedkitchen · 16/03/2019 07:08

The NHS would be in a difficult position. The drugs aren’t cheap. Also the drug only prevents HIV so if lots of people started taking it and having unprotected sex, rates of other diseases such as Hep C and syphalis would shoot up.

Report
FlibbertyGiblets · 16/03/2019 07:45

I want to know what typical mumsnet responses means.

Report
slipperywhensparticus · 16/03/2019 07:50

And they are cutting access to sexual health services btw

Report
PinkDaffodil2 · 16/03/2019 07:58

Our clinic collects details of those interested so we can contact them when more places appear on the IMPACT trial. All the evidence supports the efficacy of PrEP and I expect it will be rolled out with similar rules to Wales / Scotland in a few years. The problem with the cost going down is that the flip side is the cost of treating HIV is also reduced greatly so doesn’t necessarily make it much more cost effective in lower risk groups.

Report
HIVpos · 16/03/2019 18:46

This thread should be interesting.. Very pleased that it is being discussed on MN, especially in light of the fact that given the right conditions we are all at risk.

More places for the PrEP trial have been approved but are as yet not forthcoming in all areas that need it (London)

And yes PrEP is WAY cheaper than HIV treatment (can provide figures if needed) especially in light of the fact that PrEP can now be given in generic form here which is much much cheaper than Truvada.



.

Report
HIVpos · 17/03/2019 11:12

I do agree that there are other much more easily caught STIs than HIV. I guess the proof will be if rates of these go up as PrEP use increases. On the basis that women can contract too, and it has been proven that risks are higher for some than others, here is some further information...

Details re the PrEP Inpact trial in England: www.prepimpacttrial.org.uk/

If you can’t get a place but qualify and would still like to take it, you can access it here. The cost is £19 pm but you must get checked beforehand and then regularly. There is a good “should I take PrEP” tool. www.iwantprepnow.co.uk/about/

And as above but you can’t afford it, see here www.tht.org.uk/our-services/online-services/mags-portman-prep-access-fund

There is a pilot trial in N Ireland and Wales with no numbers cap, and in Scotland it’s available at all GUM clinics. You can get access if deemed in a high risk category.

Report
ThePlaceToVent · 17/03/2019 11:14

LaurenOrdering

Or for NGS workers and the police how have needle stick exposure or some other mishap. Hmm

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

ThePlaceToVent · 17/03/2019 11:14

*NHS

Report
HIVpos · 17/03/2019 11:31

@ThePlaceToVent there is PEP for that (bit like the morning after pill but taken for 28 days and started within 72 hrs of the incident. Available from clinics and A&E.

Btw HIV has never been contracted by anyone being stuck by a discarded needle, despite what some scaremongering newspaper articles like to tell us.

Report
ThePlaceToVent · 17/03/2019 11:37

@HIVpos

I know Smile

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.