Patient Care Access News

PrEP Access Steadily Increases, Yet Racial Health Disparities Persist

New data highlights racial health disparities in PrEP access, with Black people representing 14 percent of PrEP users in 2021 but 42 percent of new HIV diagnoses in 2020.

Proper PrEP adherence can significantly reduce HIV risk, yet those gains haven’t been seen equally across all racial groups.

Source: Getty Images

By Sarai Rodriguez

- Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) access has increased over the years, but stark racial health disparities presented at the 24th International AIDS Conference yield concern that the HIV preventive medication doesn’t aid all racial groups similarly.

Proper PrEP adherence can reduce the risk of getting HIV from sex by about 99 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data.

A CDC estimation showed that approximately 1.2 million people could benefit from comprehensive HIV prevention strategies, including PrEP. And since PrEP was approved in 2012, usage has increased on average 56 percent each year, the researchers noted. But those gains haven’t been seen equally across all racial groups.