Dr Robert Grant, PrEP pioneer

Extended interview clip

In response to requests from our viewers, Daily Xtra is releasing extended interview clips from our February pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) series. In this interview, Dr Robert Grant of the Gladstone Institutes talks about PrEP and his involvement with AIDS/HIV research.

Dr Robert Grant first started fighting HIV/AIDS while studying at the University of California, Berkeley, where he saw firsthand the carnage the disease left in its wake. Almost 30 years later he is an AIDS expert at the Gladstone Institutes and is at the forefront of the fight against the disease.

Grant began pushing antiviral drugs as a way of protecting healthy, non-infected people back in the early 2000s. In 2011, the iPrEx study, for which Grant was protocol chief, released ground-breaking research that showed that pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) could reduce the possibility of HIV transmission by more than 90 percent.

Despite the findings, the gay community has been slow to pick up on PrEP. In the above extended interview, Nicolas Kazamia talks with Grant about the promise of PrEP and the future of this life-saving drug.

For more on our comprehensive coverage of PrEP:

Part 1: Can a pill a day keep HIV away?

Part 2: A condom-free future?

Part 3: The controversy behind PrEP

Part 4: If gay men can avoid HIV with a pill, why aren’t they taking it?

Read More About:
Video, Health, News, Canada, HIV/AIDS

Keep Reading

Who gets to claim parental rights?

Xtra and TVO’s Unravelled partnered on this mini-doc diving into what "parental rights" policies mean for kids and parents across Canada

Second Alberta town votes to ban Pride flags, rainbow crosswalks

Barrhead residents voted this week in favour of new “neutrality” bylaw

Xtra Explains: Parental rights

What does Canadian law actually say when it comes to the rights of parents and trans kids?

Xtra Explains: Social vs. medical transition

Media and politicians like to fixate on the medical aspects of transition. But for most trans youth, social transition plays a much bigger part in their lives