Over a million South Africans have used the HIV prevention pill

More than a million public health-care users in South Africa — 1,033,805 — had started to use the HIV prevention pill by the end of May, with over half doing so in the past two years, health department data shows. 

If taken daily, the pill, which consists of two antiretrovirals  emtricitabine and tenofovir  can lower someone’s chances of getting HIV through sex to almost zero. Antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) are the medicines that people with HIV take to prevent the virus from making copies of itself in their bodies, but in the case of HIV treatment (as opposed to HIV prevention), two ARVs instead of the standard three are used (our country’s entry-level treatment is a three-in-one tablet with tenofovir, lamivudine and dolutegravir). 

Drugs taken to stop HIV from infecting someone are called PrEP, short for pre-exposure prophylaxis. Pills used for HIV prevention are known as oral PrEP because they’re taken through the mouth.

The health department introduced the pill in June 2016 to groups of people, such as sex workers and men who have sex with men, who have a higher chance than the general population to contract HIV. In 2020 it became available to anyone who wanted it, as long as the clinic they visited stocked it. 

About 3,700 government clinics now stock oral PrEP, most of them in KwaZulu-Natal. 

But the daily HIV prevention pill is no longer the only — or most efficacious — medication that someone can use to stop the virus from infecting them. A two-monthly ARV injection known as CAB-LA (CAB-LA is short for long-acting cabotegravir; cabotegravir is an ARV), was registered in South Africa in 2022, and studies have shown that it works even better than the pill and virtually eliminates a user’s chances of getting HIV. 

CAB-LA, however, is considerably more expensive to make than the pill, and therefore also costs way more. It’s being sold in the US for R54,000 a pop; a monthly supply of the HIV prevention pill in South Africa costs about R60

The HIV prevention pill was introduced in South Africa in June 2016 and it was initially offered only to groups of people (called key populations) who have a higher chance than the general population to contract HIV. Such groups include sex workers, men who have sex with menteens and young African womenpeople who inject drugs and transgender people

Four years later, in 2020, anyone who needed it could ask for the pill for free, if it was stocked by the government clinic they visited. The goal is to make the tablets available at all public primary health-care clinics. When someone uses the government health system, a primary health-care clinic is their first point of entry into the system (in the same way that people using private health-care go to their GP when sick, public health users go to their primary health-care clinic). 

In 2020, however, Covid hit, which slowed down the HIV prevention pill’s wider rollout. But after the pandemic uptake improved. 

Where are we now? 

By the end of May 2023, the HIV prevention pill was available at 79% (2,782 out of 3,506) of primary health-care clinics in South Africa. But it was also available for free at 960 other facilities not traditionally defined as primary health-care facilities, such as clinics at universities, correctional facilities, hospitals and other partner facilities. The pill was therefore available for free at 3,747 facilities. 

The health department’s goal for the 2023/2024 financial year (March 1 2023 to February 29 2024) is for the pill to be available at all of the country’s 3,506 government primary health-care clinics. 

By May 2023, Gauteng, KZN, Mpumalanga and the Free State were close to this goal at least 98% of primary health-care clinics stocked the pill. But the Northern Cape (46%), Western Cape (43%) and Limpopo (29%) were still far behind. 

In the 2022/2023 financial year (March 1 2022 to February 28 2023), the health department’s goal was to get 461,372 people to start using the HIV prevention pill. It managed to get 421,236 people to take up the pill, reaching 91% of the target.

Most of the clinics which stock the pill are in KZN and Gauteng. KZN is the province with the highest proportion of people with HIV in South Africa. 

Women between the ages of 15 and 24 are the largest group of people in South Africa who have started to use the HIV prevention pill. They make up more than half (53%) of all the people who began using the pill in the 2022/2023 financial year. This is also the group among whom new HIV infections are increasing the fastest in South Africa, indicating the need for them to be reached by PrEP. 

In general, more women than men take up the pill. 

For the past 18 months, donors such as the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief, and the Global Fund to Fight Aids, TB & Malaria, have been negotiating with CAB-LA’s manufacturer, ViiV Healthcare, for a nonprofit price. Though an official price hasn’t yet been announced, a cost of $240 (about R4,500) for a year’s supply (six injections) has been mentioned by various organisations, a price which Mitchell Warren of the New York-based advocacy organisation Avac says is likely accurate. He says as demand increases the price could very well drop to below $100, but that is still much more than the cost of the pill. Avac hosts a coalition that looks at how to make long-acting PrEP available as fast as possible. 

Cheaper, generic versions of CAB-LA are likely to become available in about three to seven years, says Warren. 

CAB-LA will be rolled out in implementation trials in South Africa from late this year or early 2024. Rather than testing how well a drug works, implementation studies look into potential rollout problems and ways to get people to use them. 

And that, says Linda-Gail Bekker, who is running an implementation trial at the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation at the University of Cape Town, is the most important thing to focus on right now: how to make PrEP appealing and easy to get. “Like the provision of fast food, where you have different ways, such as drive-throughs, home deliveries or pickup points, to choose from to order food, we need to offer people choices for how to get PrEP.” 

And South Africa is well on its way to giving people those choices: in August, pharmacists, for instance, got permission to prescribe the HIV prevention pill, adding one more way (in addition to clinics) to access the pill. 

In March 2002, another type of PrEP, in the form of a vaginal ring that is inserted monthly, was registered in South Africa. The ring, which releases an ARV, dapivirine, reduces a user’s chances of contracting HIV by about 30%. The ring is currently being rolled out in implementation trials in South Africa. 

Warren says: “We need to offer people PrEP choices, and we need to do it in a way that is not stigmatising and doesn’t make it seem that health workers are focused on someone’s ‘risk’ of getting HIV and therefore stigmatising the pill, injection or ring. Rather, they should focus on talking to people about what they’d like to get out of their sexual lives, and how PrEP can help them to achieve that.” 

We looked at health department data to see where the country is with mass rollout of the HIV prevention pill. 

What has happened in the past two years? 

Over the past two years, many more people started to use the HIV prevention pill. 

By the end of May, more than a million people (1,033,805) had begun using the daily pill  more than half (576,000) of them started using the medication in the past two years.


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

3:15 Kruger Park beefs up security at Numbi Road after killing of German tourist
3:10 Western Cape weather forecast: Mostly clear with cool temps- Thursday, 26 October
3:10 Phophi Ramathuba takes the lead for Limpopo’s first female premier
3:08 Northern Cape weather forecast: Partly cloudy to clear skies – Thursday, 26 October
3:06 Limpopo weather forecast: Partly cloudy to clear skies – Thursday, 26 October
3:02 ROB ROSE: Scary October for Markus Jooste
3:00 Daily news update: SA’s egg supply, Senzo Meyiwa murder trial and vaping crisis
3:00 Slow electoral law process could impact announcement of election date
3:00 Sand mining company appeals against refusal of water licence in Philippi
2:55 Over a million South Africans have used the HIV prevention pill
2:55 GoldOne hostage situation ‘likely to further weaken SA’s already poor global standing’
2:40 Mafiosi miners hostage crisis reveals disturbing truths
2:30 ANC faces growing discontent ahead of 2024 elections
2:20 The paradox of inclusion: SA’s struggle with immigration and inequality
2:00 Daily Love Horoscope: Here’s what love has for you today – 26 October 2023
2:00 DINNER PARTY INTEL: Prime parking at Clifton — for a driver with deep pockets
1:51 From R18 550 to WHOPPING R169 880 for Rugby World Cup Final SEAT
1:15 Daily Horoscope: Here’s what’s in store for you today – Thursday, 26 October 2023
1:00 Israel-Hamas war already hitting regional economies: IMF chief
0:00 Palestinian sings to ‘block out’ roar of Israel strikes
21:34 DA: Gauteng Premier’s anti-corruption unit is grossly understaffed
21:23 Russia and China veto draft resolution on Gaza at UN
21:23 Russia and China veto draft resolution on Gaza at UN Security Council
21:09 Customs officials jailed after accomplice who swallowed 89 balls of cocaine turns state witness
21:00 ‘Frozen in time’ landscape discovered under Antarctic ice
20:54 Can I be allergic to some cats and not others?
20:47 Can I feed my cat mashed potatoes?
20:47 Instagram Reel: Can you predict the Rugby World Cup final battle results? [Video]
20:37 Can cats eat apple pie?
20:31 Trump fined $10,000 for violating gag order for a second time
20:24 Viral YouTube Short | Infant of expectant mother in Israeli airstrikes miraculously rescued [Video]
20:23 Can I feed my cat pecan pie?
20:14 EDITORIAL | The Samas is an expensive indulgence provincial government can ill-afford
20:10 24 hours in pictures, 25 October 2023
20:06 Tears and joy as miners return to the surface after hostage drama
20:01 Gauteng health department clarifies policy on free health care for migrant mothers
20:01 Scrutiny on child nutrition after deaths of seven children from ‘food poisoning’
20:01 Court orders custody inquiry after child is removed from uncles’ care
20:00 British ex-police officer jailed for child sex offences
19:58 Viral YouTube Short | An Israeli captive shares their experiences in Gaza [Video]
19:54 Are you storing your wine properly? Don’t make these amateur mistakes
19:51 Do cats need sunbathing to be healthy?
19:45 The River live updates: Lindiwe is still upset about the recent events
19:37 Uzalo live updates: A big brawl exposes Hlelo’s secret
19:37 Viral YouTube Short | A London woman attacks people who are supporting Palestinians [Video]
19:35 Muvhango live updates: Shaz is in the trenches as she comes to terms with bankruptcy
19:13 Infrastructure key to Namibia’s battery metal ambitions, miners say
19:13 Viral YouTube Short | Grief, sorrow after Palestinian girl discovers her mom’s body [Video]
19:12 Ex-minister Dipuo Peters flouted ethics code: committee
19:07 I'm not chasing executives away from SOEs, says Pravin Gordhan
19:04 UZALO: Tonight’s episode, 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
19:00 GENERATIONS: Tonight’s episode, 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
19:00 South Africa risks 15 000 deaths by 2050 if green transition delayed – study
18:59 WATCH: Leopard takes a stroll along Western Cape dam wall
18:57 Coronation dumps platinum stocks
18:57 Coronation dumps stocks in dying platinum sector
18:54 Competition watchdog must protect small businesses against big tech: Patel
18:49 Joburg Transport MEC Kenny Kunene launches new world-class tech for Metrobus fleet
18:48 Republican Mike Johnson elected US House speaker after weeks of infighting
18:40 WATCH: SA man conducts bathroom experiment shows how women with long nails wipe their bums, video goes viral
18:40 House of Zwide live updates: Zola professes his love for Zanele
18:30 MasterChef Australia announces new judge line-up after Jock Zonfrillo’s death
18:27 NIKIWE: Tonight’s episode, 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
18:27 Cake-loving Ox Nche hopes for sweet taste of success in World Cup final
18:18 Renault to invest $3.2bn in eight new models for global relaunch
18:17 Daily Lotto results: Wednesday, 25 October 2023
18:09 Viral Video: Groomsmen entertaining guests at wedding has taken TikTok by storm
18:05 Drama as parrot predicts Springboks’ win in Rugby World Cup final (Video)
18:01 IEC ‘anxiously awaits’ Constitutional Court ruling on election law
18:00 Skeem Saam live updates: Pax dares Mahlatse to prove that he’s not scared of girls
17:57 Teen left church after prophecy from pastor who later 'sexually abused' him
17:55 Learner suicide: Grade 6 pupil found hanging after alleged bullying
17:54 Nissan unveils powerful electric GT-R concept
17:48 Johannesburg Water: Critically low reservoirs and towers listed
17:47 ‘I don’t mind being Nelson Mandela,’ says Donald Trump defending his legal battles
17:46 SCANDAL: Tonight’s episode, 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
17:42 SA secures R19bn World Bank loan for energy transition
17:39 Banyana earn crucial 1-1 away draw with DRC in Olympic qualifier
17:38 Heineken on track but expects tough conditions in Nigeria
17:38 The CRAZY prices of 2023 Rugby World Cup final tickets
17:35 Australia drub the Dutch after Maxwell mayhem
17:34 HEATWAVE: Residents advised to stay out of the sun and hydrate
17:31 Shipbuilder’s owner blames Mozambique’s Nyusi for ‘tuna bond’ scandal
17:28 Lotto and Lotto Plus results: Wednesday, 25 October 2023
17:25 Brave Mzansi driver dodges hijackers with impressive driving skills (Video)
17:24 Western Cape push to repair storm damage before festive season rush
17:22 HOUSE OF ZWIDE: Tonight’s Episode for 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
17:20 Banyana earn a crucial draw against lowly DR Congo
17:16 SKEEM SAAM: Tonight’s episode, 25 October 2023 [VIDEO]
17:08 Willie le Roux reflects on semifinal post-match fracas against England
17:05 Transition to clean energy ‘unstoppable’, report reads
17:00 Municipalities owe Rand Water billions of rand
16:54 Detectives pursue gunmen who killed three, injured fourth person in Cape Town
16:52 Argentina’s Patricia Bullrich signals support for Javier Milei in run-off
16:48 Who is to drive the Boks, Libbok or Pollard?
16:47 Johannesburg Water announces WATER SHUTDOWN in these suburbs until midnight
16:40 TS Galaxy chairman Tim Sukazi reveals the cost of Bernard Parker’s surgery
16:40 Cavin Johnson wants to get Amakhosi winning ‘playing the Kaizer Chiefs way’
16:39 SA’s first health information exchange CareConnect links patient records
16:34 LETTER: Bloody US war record