OutBoise Magazine - August 2015 | Page 26

26  |  OutBoise Magazine  | NEWS My friend Alex Garner, who conducts HIV OutBoise.com | Issue 10.1 | August 2015 other study out of Emory that nearly 70 percent of awareness and prevention programs across the all new HIV transmissions for both gay and bi men country, says this has impacted how gay men now and transgender women occur in a primary rela- relate to each other because it’s eliminated a key tionship. But the Brown researchers are quick to emotional obstacle to love that gay men have note: These men and women are willing to go on had since the late 1980s: fear. PrEP, not to suddenly ditch condoms once they’re on PrEP, but to protect themselves because they Like a lot of guys, Alex used to almost exclusively date other HIV-positive men, but PrEP has changed that. He told Plus magazine that the possibility of having a real relationship with someone who is serodiscordant seems much more realistic now because PrEP is available – and it changes the relationship too. Despite Weinstien’s rants, PrEP really doesn’t seem to be really used by wanton sluts who want to man-whore about town. (But, if it is, more power to the users, I say; the LGBT rights movements was built on sexual liberation, and PrEP is to gay men in 2015 what birth control was to feminists in 1970, but I digress.) In fact, when someone is considering PrEP because their partner has HIV, it’s very often a sign that they love and want to build a future with that person, the exact opposite of one-night stands popular in hookup culture. Weinstein’s ditching condoms theory seems inaccurate. At least one study from Brown Univer- already ditched those condoms long ago. Today, PrEP is appearing in dating profiles and on apps like Grindr and Scruff. Even sites aimed at HIV-positive men, like BarebackRT, report that HIVnegative men are now posting profiles there and touting that they are on PrEP. For generations of men and trans women who’ve lived in fear of HIV, suddenly having a prevention pill is a godsend. That it’s mired in controversy is no surprise; birth control was once as well for many of the same concerns. But the bottom line is that Truvada as PrEP is one option, one of the best we have available today. Like birth control pills, though, it isn’t for everyone. Soon we’ll have a rectal microbicide, injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis, vaginal rings, and more. And when we do, I hope the writers of Looking get at least a tiny footnote in history for breaking ground on TV and for having helped destigmatize PrEP for a generation of LGBT viewers. sity found that many HIV-negative men in relation- Diane Anderson-Minshall is editor in chief of Plus ships already ditch condoms because they want magazine, the HIV Plus Treatment Guide mobile more intimacy in their relationship (and they do so app, and HIVPlusMag.com. This column is a proj- even when one or both of the guys are having sex ect of Plus, Positively Aware, POZ, The Body and Q outside of that relationship). Syndicate, the LGBT wire service. Visit their websites – hivplusmag.com, positivelyaware.com, poz. Over half the men in that study said they’d go on PrEP, which is good because we know from an- com and thebody.com – for the latest updates on HIV/AIDS.