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This information from Aditya has already been posted in another thread on this forum, but since its important and relevant to this thread I'm posting it here as well:
PEP is vital. If you have a doubt that you may have exposed yourself to infection, it is advisable to start PEP immideately. The advisable time is within 24 hours [in protocols developed for healthcare providers]. However some say that though with decreasing efficacy, it may still be commenced within upto 72 hours of infection. [in other words, soonest is best]. After 72 hours, its usually pointless.
But PEP is not the morning after pill for gay men. Its success is TOTALLY DEPENDENT on adherence to the regime. And those who think that it is a morning after pill usually will not adhere for the month to the drugs. Its psychological. The drugs **** yu up so much that enjoying sex becomes an impossibility. And those who want a morning after pill are really doing it because they want to have unprotected SEX. So ultimately they do not adhere, they end up spending a ton of money, and they get NO BENEFIT whatsoever.
As to the debate, we must realise that PEP was actually developed as a protocol for exposure in medical settings where doctors or healthcare providers may have exposed themselves as part of their job. It was adopted for gay men since it had some proven efficacy. Nice thought, that. But I personally feel that it should be given only to those gay men who habitually practice safe sex and may have suffered accidental exposure to infection [say by way of a torn condom].
It is certainly not for those who are habitually irresponsible enough to not practice safe sex and then want to lean on PEP for a sense of protection.
I want to share an actual case I know of. A gay friend of mine in San Francisco kept ARVs in his medicine cabinet, to pop pills after barebacking sex. He certainly did not adhere to any regimen. Just arbit self medication. He did get infected. And the worst thing is that just one year after testing positive to HIV, he had to be put on ARVs and today three years down the line, he is already resistant to first line ARV and has had to be put on second line ARVs. In America, this costs a bomb.
This is not a a scientifically proven claim, and I am not qualified to make such a claim either, but somehow that nagging feeling persists that his fast forward progression of infection has something to do with all those pills he popped earlier "the day after".
Best, Aditya B
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