Starting Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) – What to Expect #
Quick Overview #
Starting ART is the single most important step you can take for your health after diagnosis. The medication stops HIV from replicating, protects your immune system, and over time makes your viral load undetectable. Here is what the first days and weeks actually look like.
Why This Matters #
Taking that first pill can feel monumental. You might hold the tablet in your hand and think about everything it represents: your diagnosis, your future, and the reality that this is something you will do every day. That is a lot to process. But here is what the pill actually represents: you are choosing to take control. And it works.
In Rwanda, ART is provided free of charge through government health facilities. Dream Village’s CATS supporters have walked thousands of young people through their first weeks of treatment. You do not need to figure this out alone.
How ARVs Work #
Antiretroviral drugs work by blocking HIV at different stages of its life cycle. The virus needs to copy itself to survive, and ARVs interrupt that process. Most people in Rwanda take a combination of drugs in a single daily pill, often a regimen that includes dolutegravir, which the WHO recommends as a preferred first-line treatment because it is effective, well-tolerated, and has a high barrier to resistance.
Your specific regimen depends on your health, age, weight, and any other conditions. Your healthcare provider will explain exactly what you are taking and why.
Your First Days on Treatment #
The first few days are often uneventful. Many people feel no different at all. Some experience mild side effects like nausea, headaches, fatigue, or vivid dreams. These are typically your body adjusting to the medication and usually improve within 2 to 4 weeks.
Pick a consistent time to take your pill, something you can build into a daily routine like brushing your teeth or eating breakfast. Consistency helps the medication work at its best and reduces the chance of resistance developing.
What NOT to Mix With Your Medication #
Some substances can interfere with how ARVs work in your body. Tell your doctor about any other medications, supplements, or traditional remedies you use. Alcohol does not directly interact with most ARVs, but heavy drinking can make you forget doses or weaken your immune system. Some herbal supplements can reduce the effectiveness of your medication, so always check first.
Adherence Matters from Day One #
Taking your medication every day, at the same time, is crucial. When ARV levels in your blood drop because of missed doses, HIV gets a chance to replicate and potentially develop resistance to the drugs. Resistance means your current medication may stop working, and you could need to switch to a more complex regimen.
The good news: if you take your pills consistently, the virus becomes undetectable within a few months, usually by the 3 to 6 month mark. At Dream Village, 84% of the young people in our network achieve viral suppression. That number is built one daily dose at a time.
The Timeline to Feeling Better #
Most people notice improvements in their overall energy and wellbeing within the first few weeks to months of treatment. As your viral load drops and your CD4 count recovers, your immune system gets stronger. Regular follow-up appointments at 3 and 6 months will show you, in actual numbers, how treatment is working.
Key Takeaways #
- ART is free in Rwanda, works from the first dose, and stops HIV from damaging your immune system.
- Mild side effects in the first weeks are common and usually pass. Talk to your doctor if they persist.
- Adherence from day one is the foundation of long-term treatment success.
Need Support? #
Your CATS peer supporter can check in with you during those first weeks, answer questions that come up between appointments, and share their own experience of starting treatment.
Get adherence support from your CATS peer