The drug that prevents HIV infection is to be made available on the NHS for the first time to try to eradicate the new transmission of the virus within the decade.
Presentation — or pre-risk prevention — will be routinely made available to patients deemed to be at high risk of catching HIV from April.
Health secretary Matt Hancock said: “We are rolling out PrEP and making it available across the country – with evidence showing it almost completely eradicates the chances of getting HIV. This will benefit tens of thousands of people’s lives, and drive us towards our ambition of zero HIV transmissions in this decade.”
Having HIV was once a “death sentence”, and it still has “a devastating impact on so many lives across the country”, he said.
NHS England will cover the costs of the drug, having carried out a three-year study involving more than 20,000 people.
The Department of Health said local authorities would be given funding from April, with £16m to be made available in 2020-21, to commission services in England for the first time to patients.
Musician and Aids activist Sir Elton John told the Sunday Times the decision was the “right” one.
He added: “Taking PrEP prevents HIV from being passed on, which is truly incredible.
“It is the right decision for the UK government to roll this out more widely to minimise the spread of this disease, so more people are protected – which is critical in fighting an epidemic.”
PrEP involves HIV negative people taking antiretroviral medicine, which works by stopping the virus replicating in the body.
PrEP is already available in Scotland to people who are considered to be at high risk of contracting HIV, and a trial of the drug is taking place in Wales.
According to the Terrence Higgins Trust, most recent estimates suggest around 103,800 people were living with HIV in the UK, and about 7 per cent of those are not aware they are HIV positive.
New diagnoses of HIV in the UK fell to their lowest level in almost two decades in 2018 – 4,484 people – due to the success of preventative measures, Public Health England said.
These include HIV testing, condom provision, and broader use of PrEP.
The rollout comes after a long-running battle by campaign groups to “secure a guarantee of proper access to this game-changer for HIV prevention in England”, chief executive of the Terrence Higgins Trust, Ian Green, said.
National AIDS Trust chief executive Deborah Gold said: “Regular commissioning of preparations brings us one step closer to our goal of ending new HIV transmission by 2030, but many lies further.
Professor Noel Gill of Public Health England said that preparation is “highly effective in protecting against HIV” when it is taken consistently and that efforts to eliminate HIV transmission by 2030 “are at high risk of achieving preparedness” Depend on providing HIV efficiently “.
Get the best of The Thus delivered to your inbox – subscribe to The Thus Newsletters. For the latest News follow The Thus on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest and stay in the know with what’s happening in the world around you – in real-time.