What is scary is some of the misleading information that could be believed in reading this article.
The headline: "World Health Organisation recommends that all gay men should take antiretroviral medicine to halt HIV epidemic." No, that is not quite what WHO recommended. The recommendation is that all men that are having sex with other men should take this drug. You can be homosexual, and for that matter heterosexual or bisexual, and not be sexual active. The article also never uses the word "bisexual" and that is something irresponsible on the writer and website's part.
A couple paragraphs from this article:
Quote:In a report published on Friday, the WHO made “strong recommendations” that all men who have sex with men should seriously consider taking antiretroviral medicine “as an additional method of preventing the HIV infection from spreading”, even if they haven’t got the virus themselves.
The report says that in addition to other forms of protection like condoms and regular testing, increased use of antiretroviral drugs in the gay community could have a significant impact in stopping the spread of HIV and could prevent a million new infections in the next ten years, according to the WHO.
More irresponsibility due to some poor use of wording here. From this it could be interpreted that new HIV cases are increasing despite condom use, something you yourself OP seem to suggest. New HIV cases are increasing among gay men, and sadly it seems to be happening disproportionately in younger gay men, because of the lack of use of condoms in so may men having sex with other other men. The use of condoms greatly reduces the risk of HIV infection. An additional method of protection does not mean the drugs must be used in conjunction with condoms. In people not using condoms, the risk of transmission will be lowered with use of this drug, something that is very difficult to understand from this article. It has always been known that condoms are not 100% effective, but the risk is greatly lowered and even before the recommendation of the use of these drugs, if condoms were being used much more than what they are now, the new cases of HIV transmission would be very much lower than what they are now. The misleading wording in this article is actually quite dangerous as it could lead some people to think, "well condoms don't work so why even use them?" An additional method of prevention means it will reduce transmission in not only those who are already using condoms, but also those who do not, although it needs to be made clear that the use of a condom is still recommended. This could be made even more effective if doctors had this discussion of this recommendation with not only every man that is having sex with other men, but also every male patient old enough to have sex to make sure the message reaches every person that might not have told the doctor he is having sex with other men.
I am disturbed that new HIV infections are increasing among gay men, but I'm not disturbed by the recommendation of WHO because more methods of preventing and reducing transmission of HIV is a good thing. In all the years since we've known of this disease, we know people are not going to stop having sex and we know some people are not going to always have safe sex, so we need to deal with reducing the transmission within the reality of the world we live in and it includes both education with hope methods of prevention reaches everyone and is practiced by everyone, and it includes new methods of preventing transmission.
SHORT TLDR VERSION OF EVERYTHING I SAID: Nowhere in the article does it make clear that the cause of increased rates of HIV infection among gay men is caused by not practicing safe sex and using condoms and not making that clear is very dangerous.