PROJECT INFORM IN OTHER MEDIA ... 2008
Swiss AIDS report gets mixed reactions
by Seth Hemmelgarn, Bay
Area Reporter
February 14, 2008
(mention of Project Inform in bold below)
recent Swiss AIDS Commission report demonstrated that some
HIV-positive people who met several criteria did not transmit
the virus to their partners, even when condoms weren't used.
The finding sparked a joint statement critical of the report
from the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and the San Francisco
Department of Public Health.
The statement said the report offered "insufficient evidence
to abandon safer sex practices."
According to the joint statement, the Swiss report was based
on four studies that used only heterosexual couples. One study
found that HIV-negative partners did not become infected when
the HIV-positive partner followed his treatment regimen, had
at least six months where his viral load couldn't be detected,
and he didn't have other sexually transmitted diseases. That
study involved 393 couples.
Another study that the report was based on found that almost
14 percent of 43 HIV-negative partners became infected if the
HIV-positive partner sometimes strayed from his treatment regimen,
according to the joint statement.
Mark Cloutier, executive director of the San Francisco AIDS
Foundation, said, "I think there's a little hazard of them
putting this out and not adequately explaining what was not known
and the unpredictability of abandoning condoms."
The two San Francisco entities took issue with the report for
several reasons. One was that only heterosexual intercourse was
studied. Other reasons included the possibility of viral load
spikes, and resistance developing to treatment drugs.
The Bay Area Reporter sent a copy of the statement
to Bernard Hirschel, a co-author of the Swiss report. Hirschel
responded by e-mailing a frequently asked questions sheet that
didn't directly address the statement.
However, the sheet did purport that the chance of viral load
spikes are small. The sheet also states, "There is really no
good biological reason why vaginal transmission should be any
different from rectal transmission."
Dana Van Gorder, executive director of Project Inform, which
operates an HIV/AIDS hotline, said the Swiss report reaffirms
something important—adherence to treatment can lead
to reduced viral replications, which can help avoid transmission.
"I think we have to treat people like adults with regard to
this kind of data," Van Gorder said. "Medical strategies like
effective HIV treatment, combined with the practice of safe sex
is ... in their interest."
Cloutier agreed the fact that treatment can reduce the risk
of infection is well known, but said this was a separate matter,
since the Swiss report doesn't just talk about effective treatment.
Longtime AIDS activist Michael Petrelis blogged about Hirschel's
work in December, before the report was released. He wonders
why others didn't catch on, and said there should have been a
public meeting locally before the statement was put out.
"The basic modus operandi is experts in ivory towers
make a pronouncement for the rest of us, and we weren't invited
to sit at the table," Petrelis said.
Dr. Grant Colfax, the health department's director of HIV prevention,
said, "This response was done in collaboration with a well-respected
community-based organization ... We thought it was important
to get this information out into the community. "He was referring
to SFAF's participation in the joint statement.
Colfax said with the exception of Petrelis, response has been "almost
uniformly positive."
Cloutier said the report didn't get a lot of traction among
the public. He said he hasn't heard of anyone calling the organization's
hotline or Magnet, the gay men's health center in the Castro
that merged with SFAF last year. Van Gorder said he wasn't aware
of calls to Project Inform about the report.