News & Media > NHS England and local authorities must ensure routine availability of PrEP for HIV prevention by 1 April 2019, says coalition of charities

NHS England and local authorities must ensure routine availability of PrEP for HIV prevention by 1 April 2019, says coalition of charities

We need PrEP now Tuesday 17 July 2018

A 10,000 place PrEP trial was never going to meet demand – it's time to make PrEP available to all who need it

Alongside 31 other organisations, the British HIV Association (BHIVA) is calling on NHS England and local authorities to ensure the routine availability of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) on the NHS in England by 1 April 2019.

That's why we've released a joint community statement.

The current three-year PrEP Impact trial isn't fit for purpose. It's capped at 10,000 places and within just eight months over 7,000 of these are taken.

Many participating clinics are now closed to gay and bisexual men, which means people are being turned away from clinics who are in need of PrEP – some of whom have contracted HIV as a result.

PrEP is almost 100% effective when taken as prescribed, it's cost effective when measured against the cost of lifelong HIV treatment and care, and will ultimately stop many, many people from becoming HIV positive.

NHS England and local authority commissioners must start the process now to ensure PrEP is routinely available in sexual health clinics by 1 April 2019 at the latest. We believe the PrEP IMPACT trial should continue alongside routine commissioning.

Click here to read the full community statement and show your support on social media using the hashtag #PrEPNow.