Survivalist Pro
Photo: Nicole Michalou
They complained of reduced physical sensation, less spontaneity, erectile dysfunction and a loss of intimacy. While most men felt that PrEP alone provided strong protection against HIV, they also recognised that unlike condoms, PrEP does not offer protection against other sexually transmitted infections.
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Read More »Men who have sex with men (MSM) in Seattle who had recently begun to take pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) described profound impacts on their sexual health and wellbeing that go beyond PrEP’s primary function of preventing HIV infection, according to a qualitative study recently published in the International Journal of Sexual Health. “By lowering HIV risk and offering an alternative form of protection for MSM with low or inconsistent condom use, PrEP helped participants assuage feelings of anxiety and shame surrounding their sexuality, and facilitated greater sexual satisfaction, intimacy, and self-efficacy,” Shane Collins and colleagues say. However, it also exposed users to PrEP stigma. Both positive and negative impacts are likely to be key to PrEP’s acceptability, demand and patterns of use. It's important to note that ‘sexual health’ is not defined simply by the absence of disease. “Sexual health is a state of physical, mental and social well-being in relation to sexuality,” according to the World Health Organization. Clinicians and practitioners wishing to promote gay men’s sexual health should consider the full range of impacts that PrEP may have, the authors suggest.
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Read More »While most men felt that PrEP alone provided strong protection against HIV, they also recognised that unlike condoms, PrEP does not offer protection against other sexually transmitted infections. Some men described selectively using condoms based on their perceptions of partners, while other men saw being exposed to other sexually transmitted infections as an acceptable risk. “There are times when I think to myself, ‘Well, even though I’m on PrEP, maybe I shouldn’t have unprotected sex because I might catch something else.’ But there’s another part of me that says, ‘Well, those aren’t so terminal. If I got those, I could easily just get them cleared.’” By lowering HIV risk and offering a more acceptable form of HIV prevention than condoms, PrEP helped participants lessen feelings of vulnerability, fear, and shame associated with pre-existing sexual behaviours. Men described the anxiety they had felt about sex before using PrEP and the stress this placed on their mental and emotional wellbeing. “I had done the best that I could and I still just felt like there was no winning, like every day was a constant battle against this invisible thing that lives in our blood and kills us. And I felt powerless. And it wasn’t just when I got tested. It wasn’t just when I had sex. It was six days after I had sex. It was, ‘Should I have done that? Should I have not?’” Despite these intense feelings, they typically had not resulted in sustained changes to sexual behaviour. Instead men tended to feel more shame and self-judgement about their sexual lives. Moreover, they often led men to become fatalistic about the likelihood of acquiring HIV. The man quoted in the previous paragraph continued: “I’d gotten to a point where I was having sex almost with resignation of the fact that I was probably eventually just going to get HIV. Like, it was just gonna have to happen because the alternative is not to be intimate with anybody.” Taking PrEP allowed men to experience their sexuality in new ways. The interviewee who had the greatest experience of PrEP in the sample (19 months of PrEP use) described it in these terms: “Being a gay man—especially one as promiscuous as I am—there was always a very real possibility of seroconverting. And so, while PrEP may not be 100 percent effective, it’s still very effective. And being able to live without that stress and fear was very liberating.” Many men described how using PrEP helped them improve their sense of self-efficacy. They saw their use of PrEP as empowering and proactive, in contrast to previous experiences of constrained agency. “I’d say it’s affected me pretty profoundly. There are very few situations where I find myself feeling like a victim anymore… I don’t feel like anything’s being done to me from the outside that I’m not choosing to let happen.”
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Read More »Others talked about how they could now imagine themselves having relationships with HIV-positive men. At the same time, men who had been in long-established relationships with HIV-positive men talked about how PrEP had improved sexual satisfaction by providing peace of mind and allowing the couple to stop using condoms. “[My partner] felt obligated to protect me and to do everything in his power to make sure that he didn’t transmit an infection to me. And while there still is a possibility, that fear is gone. And it has improved our sexual relations, our intimacy, and I think it’s had a positive influence on our relationship together.” Alongside these positive effects, the interviewees also experienced or worried about being stigmatised for their use of PrEP. “Talking online with other people that are cruising online websites and you tell them you’re on PrEP, there was somewhat of that shaming, ‘Oh, you’re on PrEP, you must be a slut. You must be irresponsible. You must be making really bad choices to think you need to be on this.’” There was evidence in a few mens’ accounts of this stigma being internalised, with some expressions of shame, regret and internal conflict in relation to their sexual behaviour while on PrEP. Stigma was also experienced in healthcare settings, with men feeling judged by staff for using or requesting PrEP. Doctors’ insistence that condoms should be used together with PrEP was often felt to be impractical and paternalistic, and led some men to misrepresent their condom use to their doctor.
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