Not long after being diagnosed with HIV, Jane Costello recalls entering a sexual health clinic in London in the early 90s.
“I was an anomaly. I walked into the clinic and there was this sea of men looking up at me, as if to say, ‘poor dear, she’s in the wrong place,’” she says.
Much has changed in the HIV epidemic since then – especially when it comes to treatment and prognosis. Antiretroviral medications mean people living with HIV can live long, healthy lives. People living with HIV on effective treatment can achieve an undetectable viral load, meaning they cannot pass the virus onto sexual partners – an essential component of Australia’s efforts to eliminate HIV transmission by 2030. But for all the progress we have made medically, many of the false perceptions and stigma associated with HIV linger, particularly around how the virus impacts women.
“I have met women living with HIV who have flung their arms around me and said they thought they were the only woman living with HIV in Australia,” says Costello, who is now CEO of Positive Life NSW, the largest peer support service in the state for people living with HIV.
Despite the leaps and bounds in HIV treatment and care over the past few decades, significant gaps remain in our understanding of the virus. Women living with HIV, for example, remain under represented in research, meaning we still do not fully understand how HIV affects the female body in an Australian context.
“We have so much research on how HIV impacts men, but so little on how it impacts women,” says Costello.
“It impacts how we manage women’s health longer term. I’m ageing with HIV and I look at my body and think ‘is this ageing? Is this HIV? Is this ageing exacerbated by HIV?” she says.
Costello says this lack of research, coupled with an under representation of women in HIV messaging and health campaigns, means many women living with HIV do not have a strong understanding of the virus or sexual health more broadly.
Positive Life NSW runs multiple support groups for women living with HIV to explore things like conception, pregnancy, and menopause. While these groups have been very well received, they have also highlighted some of these gaps in knowledge.
“There is a lack of nuanced information around HIV or sexual health more broadly for women living with HIV or women from multicultural backgrounds, for example. In one of our conversations about STIs, we had a number of women living with HIV who thought their antiretrovirals protected them from all STIs, for example,” says Costello.
While organisations like Positive Life NSW are making strides in increasing knowledge and awareness of HIV among their networks, they’re reliant on clinicians to connect newly diagnosed people living with HIV to their services.