Article written by Judith Auerbach and 2010 DPDF Discrimination Studies fellow Trevor Hoppe, featured in the Journal of the International AIDS Society, Volume 18, No.3:

Social scientists have much to contribute to the analysis of the real and potential contribution of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to HIV prevention around the world. Beyond just a matter of clinical efficacy and getting pills into people’s mouths, PrEP raises a number of important social-psychological questions that must be attended to in order to translate biomedical and clinical findings into uptake of PrEP among enough people at risk of HIV infection to produce population-level effectiveness. PrEP is a dynamic phenomenon with “dialectical” attributes that invite both optimism and cynicism as a desirable and effective HIV prevention strategy. PrEP disrupts traditional notions of “safe” and “unsafe” sex; it confers on its users a level of agency and control not generally achieved with condoms; and it affects sexual practices and sexual cultures in meaningful ways. As these dynamics play out in different contexts, and as new modes of PrEP administration emerge, it will be important for social scientists to be engaged in assessing their impact on PrEP implementation and effectiveness.

Publication Details

Title
Beyond “Getting Drugs into Bodies”: Social Science Perspectives on Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis for HIV
Authors
Hoppe, Trevor
Publisher
International AIDS Society
Publish Date
July 2015
Citation
Hoppe, Trevor, Beyond “Getting Drugs into Bodies”: Social Science Perspectives on Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis for HIV (International AIDS Society, July 2015).
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