Guernsey | |
Jersey | |
Isle of Man |
Anguilla | |
Akrotiri and Dhekelia | |
Bermuda | |
British Virgin Islands | |
Cayman Islands | |
Falkland Islands | |
Gibraltar | |
Montserrat | |
Pitcairn Islands | |
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha | |
Turks and Caicos Islands |
United Kingdom | |
Scotland | |
Northern Ireland | |
Guernsey | |
Jersey | |
Isle of Man | |
Akrotiri and Dhekelia | |
Bermuda | |
British Antarctic Territory | |
British Indian Ocean Territory | |
Cayman Islands | |
Falkland Islands | |
Gibraltar | |
Pitcairn Islands | |
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha | |
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands |
- Adoption
- Age of consent
- Blood donation
- Christian nation
- Civil partnership
- History of violence
- HIV/AIDS
- Military policy
- Same-sex marriage
- Intersex rights
- Transgender rights
- NHS Gender Identity Development Service
- Gender Recognition Panel
- Buggery Act 1533
- Offences Against the Person Act 1828
- Offences Against the Person Act 1861
- Labouchere Amendment
- Wolfenden report
- Sexual Offences Act 1967
- Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1980
- Homosexual Offences Order 1982
- Section 28
- Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994
- Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 2000
- Sexual Offences Act 2003
- Policing and Crime Act 2017
- Alan Turing law
- Merchant Shipping (Homosexual Conduct) Act 2017
- Public Order Act 1986
- Adoption and Children Act 2002
- Employment Equality (Sexual Orientation) Regulations 2003
- Civil Partnership Act 2004
- Gender Recognition Act 2004
- Equality Act 2006
- Regulations
- Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008
- Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008
- Equality Act 2010
- Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013
- Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Act 2014
- Northern Ireland (Executive Formation etc) Act 2019
- Corbett v Corbett (1969)
- X v United Kingdom (1978)
- Dudgeon v United Kingdom (1981)
- R v Brown (1993)
- Sutherland v United Kingdom (1994)
- Smith and Grady v United Kingdom (1999)
- Goodwin & I v United Kingdom (2002)
- HJ and HT v Home Secretary (2010)
- National AIDS Trust v NHS Service Commissioning Board (2016)
- Brighton
- London
- Liverpool
- Leeds
- Manchester
- Birmingham Gay Village
- The Calls
- Canal Street (Manchester)
- Old Compton Street
- Stanley Street Quarter
- Vauxhall
- Polari
- Saunas
- Cruising
- Stonewall
- Hall–Carpenter Archives
- Black Gay Men's Advisory Group
- FFLAG
- LGBT Foundation
- LGBT Network
- Outright Scotland
- Switchboard (UK)
- NUS LGBT
- LGBT+ Liberal Democrats
- LGBT+ Conservatives
- LGBT Labour
- Mermaids
- BiCon (UK)
- Big Gay Out
- Birmingham Pride
- Bourne Free
- Brighton Pride
- Bristol Pride
- Doncaster Pride
- Friends of Dorothy Society
- GFest – gayWise LGBT Arts Festival
- Glasgay! Festival
- Homotopia (festival)
- Leeds Pride
- Leicester Pride
- LGBT History Month
- Liverpool Pride
- BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival
- Manchester Pride
- Mr Gay UK
- Mr Gay Wales
- Northern Pride
- Nottinghamshire Pride
- Pride Cymru
- Pride Glasgow
- Pride in Hull
- Pride in London
- Pride Scotia
- Reading Pride
- Swansea Pride
- OutRage!
- Campaign for Homosexual Equality
- Homosexual Law Reform Society
- Gay Liberation Front
- Gay Rights Working Party
- Order of Chaeronea
- Timeline
- List of politicians
- First LGBT officeholders
- Violence against LGBT people
- HIV/AIDS crisis
- Death penalty
342 | MSM activity made illegal |
1533 | Death penalty introduced for MSM activity |
1543 | Buggery Act extended to Wales |
1828 | Offences Against the Person Act 1828 |
1835 | James Pratt and John Smith executed |
1861 | Death penalty for buggery abolished |
1885 | Labouchere Amendment introduced |
1889 | Cleveland Street scandal |
1895 | Oscar Wilde found guilty of gross indecency |
1912 | The Cave of the Golden Calf opens |
1921 | Plans to make lesbian activity illegal defeated |
1936 | Mark Weston transitions |
1952 | John Nott-Bower begins crackdown |
1954 | Pitt-Rivers, Montagu, Wildeblood imprisoned |
1954 | Alan Turing commits suicide |
1957 | Wolfenden report released |
1967 | MSM activity made legal (England & Wales) |
1972 | First British Gay Pride Rally |
1976 | Jeremy Thorpe resigns as Liberal leader |
1981 | MSM activity made legal (Scotland) |
1981 | First case of AIDS reported in the UK |
1982 | MSM activity made legal (NI) |
1983 | Gay men barred from donating blood |
1984 | Chris Smith elected as first openly gay MP |
1987 | Operation Spanner begins |
1988 | Section 28 comes into force |
1989 | Stonewall UK forms |
1994 | Age of consent for MSM becomes 18 |
1997 | Angela Eagle becomes first openly lesbian MP |
1998 | Bolton 7 found guilty |
1998 | Lord Alli becomes first openly gay Lord |
1999 | Admiral Duncan bombing |
2000 | Gay men allowed in HM Armed Forces |
2001 | Age of consent equalised to 16 |
2001 | MSM activity involving multiple men legal |
2002 | Same sex couples granted equal rights to adopt |
2003 | Section 28 repealed |
2004 | Civil partnerships introduced |
2004 | Gender Recognition Act 2004 |
2006 | Discrimination made illegal |
2008 | Equalised access to IVF for lesbian couples |
2008 | Incitement to homophobic hatred made a crime |
2009 | Public apology to Alan Turing |
2010 | Equality Act 2010 |
2011 | Gay men allowed to donate blood (1 yr deferral) |
2013 | Nikki Sinclaire becomes first openly trans MEP |
2013 | Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 |
2014 | First same-sex marriages take place |
2016 | MSM activity not grounds for military discharge |
2017 | Turing law implemented |
2017 | Blood donation deferral 3 months (excl. NI) |
2019 | MPs legislate for gay marriage in NI |
2020 | Gay marriage legal across UK, incl. NI |
2020 | Blood donation deferral 3 months (incl. NI) |
HIV/AIDS was first diagnosed in 1981. As of year-end 2018, 160,493 people have been diagnosed with HIV in the United Kingdom and an estimated 7,500 people are living undiagnosed with HIV. New diagnoses are highest in gay/bisexual men, with an estimated 51% of new diagnosis reporting male same-sex sexual activity as the probable route of infection. Between 2009 and 2018 there was a 32% reduction in new HIV diagnosis, attributed by Public Health England (PHE) to better surveillance and education. PHE has described an "outbreak" in Glasgow amongst people who inject drugs, and has campaigns targeting men who have sex with men in London and other major cities. London was the first city in the world to reach the World Health Organisation target for HIV, set at 90% of those with HIV diagnosed, 90% of those diagnosed on HAART and 90% of those on HAART undetectable. However, the UK as a whole has not reached this target. Under the Equality Act 2010, it is illegal to discriminate against someone based on their HIV status in the UK.
Demographics
In 2017, 93,385 people (64,472 men and 28,877 women) living with diagnosed HIV infection received HIV care in the UK. 42,739 of those are gay or bisexual.
In 2017, the prevalence of HIV in the United Kingdom was estimated at 101,600 (credible interval 99,300 to 106,400) with 92% (credible interval 88 to 94%) diagnosed. Prevalence is highest in gay/bisexual men in London with an estimated 83 (credible interval 73 to 96) per 1000 gay and bisexual men aged 15 to 74 years. HIV prevalence in this group was higher in London compared with the rest of England (134/1,000 CrI 113 to 156 and 63/1,000 CrI 53 to 76, respectively). However, the 2017 statistics showed a tremendous decrease in the number of newly HIV infected gay men during 2015-17. The number of newly HIV infected gay men decreased by a third in just two years.
4139 people were newly diagnosed during 2019. An estimated 42% of diagnoses were late (likely to have been living with the virus for over three years). Late diagnosis is associated with a 10-fold increase in the chance of death during the first year after diagnosis. Risk groups have been identified by various organisations, including National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, National Health Service and the IMPACT trial for pre-exposure prophylaxis. They are:
NHS for HIV | NICE for HIV testing | IMPACT for PrEP access |
---|---|---|
From a country with high rates of HIV | Heterosexual people at risk | |
People who share needles | People who inject drugs | |
People who have received a blood tranfusion abroad | ||
Heterosexual with black African ethnicity | ||
Men who have sex with men | ||
Trans women who have sex with men | Trans men and trans women | |
People who participate in chemsex | ||
People diagnosed with any other STI | ||
Sexual contact with any other risk group | HIV-negative people with HIV-positive partners |
Treatment and prognosis
HIV treatment is available free of charge in the UK and as a result 96% of diagnosed are receiving treatment and of those 94% have a suppressed viral load making them very unlikely to pass on the infection. In 2015, less than 1% of people living with a diagnosed HIV infection in the UK died (cause of death is uncertain and may not be HIV-related). All-cause mortality for ages 15–59 in people living with HIV was 5.7 per 1000 compared to 1.7 for the UK population as a whole. People newly diagnosed with HIV today can expect to have a normal life expectancy if they are diagnosed on time and on effective treatment.
In 2017, 39% adults seen for HIV care were 50 years of age or older. This is partly due to improvements to life expectancy for people living with HIV as well as increasing numbers of people acquiring HIV later in life.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis
Access to pre-exposure prophylaxis ("PrEP"), using a drug which can prevent HIV infection, on the National Health Service is partially limited. It is available to high-risk individuals in England through the IMPACT trial, which has a cohort size of 26,000. This was made available following the PROUD trial, a randomised control trial and a high-court battle in 2016. Use of PrEP in London, both as part of a trial and from private purchases, was partially credited in a drop in diagnoses among men who have sex with men, after a five-year plateau in diagnoses.
Although it is currently unavailable more broadly for prescription by medical professionals in NHS England, this option will become available in April 2020.
In Scotland and Wales PrEP is available free on the NHS from sexual health clinics for those deemed at high risk of acquisition. In Northern Ireland, access is only available through the risk reduction scheme from the Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, which can take referrals from other Northern Ireland sexual health clinics for high-risk patients, with funding guaranteed until the end of 2020.
Sexual health specialist Mags Portman was credited in making PrEP more accessible to gay and bisexual men in the UK. In October 2018, the Terrence Higgins Trust established the Mags Portman PrEP Access Fund to provide PrEP to those in England and Northern Ireland who cannot afford it. The fund has a maximum size of 1,000 users and will be available until the end of 2020.
Timeline
1979, June: a sample shows a UK transmission to a haemophiliac in the UK.
1981, 12 December: A 49-year-old man dies in Brompton hospital due to an AIDS related illness - the first death in the UK. He was homosexual and frequent visitor to the United States.
1982, 4 July: Terry Higgins dies of an AIDS related illness - leading to the establishment of the Terrence Higgins Trust.
1987, 9 April: Diana, Princess of Wales, opens a new ward at Middlesex Hospital for the treatment of HIV patients, shaking the hands of AIDS patients without wearing gloves.
1987: The UK Government launched "AIDS: Don't Die of Ignorance", a major public information campaign. A leaflet about AIDS was delivered to every household in the UK, which warned that it is impossible to tell who is infected with the virus.
1991, 24 November: Queen star Freddie Mercury dies of AIDS, just one day after he announced he had the condition.
1996: Triple combination therapy