There were 541,800 HIV serology tests in the state in 2021,similar to the 547,287 recorded in 2020.
Testing in public sexual health clinics has been significantly down since mid-2020. Although an increase was seen in the October-to-December quarter,it only constituted 58 per cent of tests during the same period in 2019.
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A similar pattern was seen among people starting PrEP,with a 61 per cent increase in people starting treatment in October to December last year,compared to the previous quarter,but fewer people starting the preventative medication than in the pre-COVID world.
Almost a third of the 178 new diagnoses last year were in those who likely contracted the virus recently,or within the preceding 12 months.
HIV diagnoses in NSW have gradually tracked down from 2015 to 2019,dropping by about 20 per cent overall and by 25 per cent among men who have sex with men.
The aim of the HIV Strategy 2021-2025 is the virtual elimination of transmission by reducing preventable infections by 90 per cent,starting people on treatment soon after diagnosis and reducing stigma and discrimination as a barrier to prevention and treatment.
But Grulich noted that in a number of groups in NSW “we are not seeing declines of the same magnitude as those in Australian-born gay men and those living in cities”.
“We do need to focus driving infections down in young men born overseas and people living in outer Sydney suburban and regional NSW,” he said.
Head of NSW Health’s STI Programs Unit,Dr Christopher Bourne,said while testing fell away during 2021 the numbers “were still pretty good. In other countries,the drops have been way more dramatic”.
“What we’re seeing is essentially the extension of the downward trend. Men who are HIV negative are still accessing PrEP and testing rates are now moving back to where they should be. The important thing is that fewer infections are newly acquired.”
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Ruan Uys,who was diagnosed with HIV in 2016,said despite the initial shame and stigma when he was diagnosed,ultimately it was peer connection that saved his life.
He now works in advocacy at the Bobby Goldsmith Foundation in Sydney,after founding the “Hivsters” online support group.
“We have the tools,we have the science,to end HIV. What we need to do is educate and reduce stigma around it,” he said.
While significant strides have been made with promoting messages including the benefits of PrEP among men who have sex with men,Uys said this information needed to spread to the infection’s new frontier.
“HIV is fast becoming a heterosexually acquired infection,” he said. “It’s important for hetero and bi people to get tested. Migrants,the international student community – those communities really need to know we have the support here for them.”
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Uys said while he was “super privileged” to live in a time where HIV can be treated with a daily pill,it was important the public also knew about the other treatments available.
Earlier this month,Cabenuva,Australia’s first long-acting HIV treatment was added to the PBS. The injection,given every two months,is an alternative to a daily pill.
“That is going to be magic for people who have transient lifestyles and also for people in certain cultural communities where the daily pill can be a form of disclosure,” he said.
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