Prevention funds still being wasted

This article is more than 23 years old.

Six years ago National AIDS Manual collaborated with the Terrence Higgins Trust,

the HIV project and Gay Men Fighting AIDS in an audit of gay men's HIV

prevention work in the UK. The report, HIV Prevention for gay men: a survey of

initiatives in the UK. The audit of 226 prevention agencies found that only 4%

were doing substantial HIV prevention work with gay men, despite the fact that

gay men accounted for the majority of new infections in the UK.

Since

that report was published, a lot has changed. Gay men's prevention work now

takes the biggest share of prevention funds in London, and the myth of a

dwindling gay epidemic has been decisively punctured by research which reveals

continuing high levels of unprotected sex and a steady level of 2000+ new

infections amongst gay men each year in the UK. A useful graphic review of

trends in HIV infections in the UK can be found at

href="http://www.demon.co.uk/gmfa/gmfa/h-facts.htm">http://www.demon.co.uk/gmfa/gmfa/h-facts.htm



Yet

even when health authorities allocate more funds to gay men's prevention, this

doesn't mean that things improve. A recent audit of gay men's needs in Brighton,

the UK's third largest gay city after London and Manchester, paints a sorry

picture of a continuing mismatch between the needs of gay men in Brighton and

the HIV prevention services they are offered. The report has aroused fierce

controversy in Brighton because of its uncompromising dissection of local health

authority spending on HIV prevention, and because of efforts by some in the

local gay community to tone down its conclusions. Decide for yourself by reading

the report at

href="http://www.racoon.dircon.co.uk/zorro/zorro.html">http://www.racoon.dircon.co.uk/zorro/zorro.html