I’ve had to get PrEP in several countries, so here is a cheatsheet. It’s not so easy in every country, especially for immigrants.

What is PrEP?!?

United States

  1. Free under the Affordable Care Act (see page 3 under “Coverage of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis”)
  2. Any family doctor can prescribe it.
  3. Get it at a pharmacy

Netherlands

https://www.mantotman.nl/nl/snel-regelen/prep-tegen-hiv

At the GGD,

  1. Long waiting lines
  2. Call your local GGD for appointment https://www.ggd.nl/
  3. They will ask you questions like top/bottom, condom use, group sex, etc. Answer honestly, but be as risky as possible. Mentioning things like fear of being stealthed can help.
  4. Insurance might not cover PrEP. No legal mandate AFAIK.

Alternatives are at a family doctor and https://prep-direct.nl/.

Latvia

  1. Get a referral for an “Infectologist” (infektologs) from your GP (“ģimenes ārsts”)
  2. Find an infektologist on https://eveselibaspunkts.lv/en. You can also check https://vc4.lv/pakalpojumi/arstnieciba/infektologija/
  3. Ask the infektologist for PrEP to be compensated. According to the law https://likumi.lv/doc.php?id=147522, HIV infection risk (Z20.6 “Iespēja inficēties un kontakts ar humānā imūndeficīta vīrusu”) should be 100% compensated. See also drug code J05AR03 in the “A saraksts” https://www.vmnvd.gov.lv/lv/kompensejamo-zalu-saraksti.
  4. After the infektologist prescribes it, your GP can renew the prescription.

Estonia

Currently figuring this out, so below might be wrong

  1. Get an appointment with an infektologist

Other countries?

Add comments below :)


    • Dislodge3233@feddit.deOP
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      1 year ago

      Awesome thanks!

      On June 11, 2019, the USPSTF released a recommendation with an “A” rating that clinicians offer PrEP with “effective antiretroviral therapy to persons who are at high risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) acquisition.” Accordingly, plans and issuers must cover PrEP consistent with the USPSTF recommendation without cost sharing for plan years (in the individual market, policy years) beginning on or after one year from the issue date of the recommendation (in this case, plan or policy years beginning on or after June 30, 2020).