Remember last year when the NIH was soliciting input on HIV prevention research priorities from scientists, advocates, and other stakeholders?

Remember how NIH asked all of us, time and again, to please share our expertise and give them our thoughts and ideas about the future of HIV prevention research?

Remember that?

Remember how MANY MANY MANY of us took them up on their offer?

And do you remember how NIH came out in January of 2018 and said, basically – no more microbicide research?

Remember when they said that they were only interested in drugs/formulations that were systemic and long acting, and that microbicides that were not systemic and long-acting would no longer be funded?

FINAL QUESTION – Do you think the input they received led NIH to the above decision – to no longer support products that were short acting, non-systemic, and on-demand?

SPOILER ALERT – the input they received (over 300 pages worth) – does not support their current direction. Not. One. Bit.

And we’re NOT having it.

I suggest: read the report, join the webinar, and GET BUSY.

Read the IRMA report – “Whose Choice is it Anyway? Analysis of Comments to and Responses from NIH’s 2017 Refining the Research Enterprise Request for Input on Research Priorities” right here (and share it via this url — tinyurl.com/whosechoiceanyway 

Jim Pickett

Senior Director of Prevention Advocacy and
Gay Men’s Health, IRMA Chair
AIDS Foundation of Chicago | 200 West Jackson Blvd., Suite 2100 | Chicago, IL 60606
Mobile: 773-600-6407| Main: 312-922-2322 | Skype: jimpickett66