Feature

Opinion: We must make PrEP accessible to everyone, and now

We need a national strategy for HIV prevention, writes Simon Copland.

PrEP pill

Australia is within reach of achieving its pledge to end new HIV transmissions by 2020. Source: Getty Images / Marc Bruxelle

Last week, ; an attempt to clear a waiting list of over 600 Victorians who are trying to access the drug. The funding comes on top of $1.4 million already directed toward the trial in the state, with over 4,000 people now likely to be able to access the drug. 

While the Victorian announcement is welcome, it once again highlights the shambolic national approach to the provision of PrEP. If we are to ever reach the goal of ending HIV, this approach must be replaced with a national strategy that includes the immediate placing of the drug onto the PBS and increased funding for education and access services. 

Last year, the Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations , but HIV infections remain a major issue. There are , approximately 30% more than just a decade ago. These numbers do not look like they’re changing any time soon.
With these concerning statistics, HIV has once again become a national policy issue. The Australian Government , a proposal backed up by a

It’s a laudable goal, but one that will not be possible unless we fix our national policy regarding PrEP. Considered , PrEP fills a significant gap in the HIV toolkit. It provides avenues for prevention for those who do not want to or are unable to use condoms or other preventative measures, or for situations when these measures fail. 

Despite this, Truvada, the brand name of PrEP, , four years after the US Food and Drug Administration Approved the same drug. An attempt to list Truvada on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme , making the drug extremely expensive for those who want to purchase it in Australia.
This has left those who want to access PrEP with limited options. Unless you want to pay approximately over $1,000 per month to buy the drug locally, via trials run by State Governments, or through importing the drug from overseas. Both of these present major problems, with trials having limited numbers and reach into the community, and with importation providing logistical and bureaucratic hurdles. Getting the drug is still a difficult, and often tedious, thing to achieve for many. 

What we have, therefore, is a patchwork of policies, ones which represent a systematic failure to take the drug seriously. For a Federal Government aiming to end HIV infections in the next three years, this is simply not good enough. 

Things need to change, and now. 

We need a proper national strategy in relation to the drug – one that brings Federal and State Governments - as well as community organisations – together, in order to best figure out how to make the drug easily accessible to all who want it. We must get rid of the current patchwork of policies we have, making PrEP an integral part of any national strategy to end HIV.
As a first step, PrEP should immediately be placed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, a measure that would significantly reduce the cost of the drug. Putting PrEP on the PBS will make it possible to access it cheaply through a GP and/or pharmacist, removing many of the logistical hurdles people face when aiming to get access to it.

Beyond this, the Federal Government must invest in more national funding for education programs and access to PrEP, particularly providing resources for those with a lower-socio economic status. While , part of this must also mean continue to fund local organisations, such as the 2 Spirits Sexual Health Program in Queensland, . These sorts of programs are essential to equality of access to preventative measures such as PrEP, but cannot do their work if facing the constant threat of funding cuts.

The end of HIV is well within our reach. We could end infections by 2020. We will not, however, be able to achieve this goal if the policy shambles regarding PrEP remain in place. We need a national strategy now, putting PrEP on the PBS and increasing funding for access and education around the drug. 


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5 min read
Published 29 March 2017 3:42pm
Updated 29 March 2017 4:25pm
By Simon Copland


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