• mustbe3to20signs@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        PrEP isn’t a magical pill that makes you immune to HIV, it’s a fixed combination of medicines used to treat actual HIV infections taken in advance to prevent the virus from adding its genetic code to your CD4 immune cells DNA.

        As any medication it has limitations (requires high compliance, especially in on-demand settings; only protects against HIV; …) and side effects.

        • jet@hackertalks.com
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          1 year ago

          Everything you said is 100% true. Absolutely.

          But compared to the horror of potentially getting HIV, it’s pretty magical in promiscuous circles.

          It’s much better than the alternative

          • mustbe3to20signs@feddit.de
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            1 year ago

            I see HIV patients on a daily basis at my job and there is no almost no horror. I haven’t seen a “real” AIDS case (the final stadium of the infection) in years and even the one patient that came close had a Lazarus like recovery once he started ART.
            HIV is still a serious disease with comorbidities but it’s “only” chronical not lethal.

            But a prevented infection is better than a treated one, so you’re right.

            • plague-sapiens@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Last thing I read about HIV was, that if everybody takes their medicine, infection rates would go to zero and thus HIV could be destroyed in some generations, at least in the western. Africa is still a hug problem afaik. Rumor says, that some people there get infected just to get the HIV drugs which can get you high.

        • jet@hackertalks.com
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          1 year ago

          Yes. There’s different medications available for prep each with its own trade-offs. The vast majority of them can potentially antagonize the liver, so it’s important to monitor liver function well on prep. As well as periodic HIV screenings, prep is for pre-exposure only. If somebody has HIV already, prep is not what they should be using, could be detrimental, hence the HIV screenings.

          As of all medications, each individual must balance the pros and cons, and their net risks based on their activities.

          Someone in a committed relationship probably does not need to consider prep, someone with multiple sexual partners who have in turn multiple sexual partners are great candidates for prep and the trade off it presents