PEP in North Carolina — post-exposure prophylaxis, 72-hour window
The number
PEP prevents HIV only if started within 72 hours of exposure; every emergency department in North Carolina carries it on formulary.
Ryan White Part B
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Communicable Disease Branch
State ADAP
North Carolina AIDS Drug Assistance Program (NC-ADAP)
Income cap 300% FPL
State PrEP-DAP
Not operated; federal Ready Set PrEP applies
Accessing PEP in North Carolina — the 72-hour window
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is a 28-day course of three HIV medications that prevents HIV after a possible exposure — condomless sex with someone who has or may have HIV, a needle-sharing event, or a needlestick injury. PEP works only if started within 72 hours of exposure and works best when started within the first 2 hours. If you're reading this after a recent possible exposure and you haven't started PEP yet, treat it as an emergency: go to the nearest emergency department tonight.
In North Carolina, PEP is available from every emergency department and from urgent-care clinics at some community health centers. The standard regimen — tenofovir/emtricitabine plus dolutegravir or raltegravir — is on the formulary of every major retail pharmacy. The first week's worth is often dispensed directly from the ED; a follow-up visit within a few days transitions you to a 28-day prescription. Four weeks later, a repeat HIV test confirms the prevention worked.
Cost: most insurance plans cover PEP with standard copays. If you're uninsured or your exposure was sexual assault, the Gilead Advancing Access patient-assistance program and the Office for Victims of Crime's Crime Victim Compensation Fund cover the full course. Some states run state-level Sexual Assault Forensic Exam (SAFE) funds that pay PEP costs when exposure follows a reported assault. The state HIV line is 1-919-733-7301 if you need help figuring out the right place to go tonight.
If your PEP course finishes and you think you may be at ongoing risk, ask about starting PrEP the same week. PrEP-to-PEP-to-PrEP sequencing is common and supported — you do not have to wait between the two. Long-time Black residents name UNC Infectious Diseases Clinic and RAIN (Regional AIDS Interfaith Network) as the local institutions that show up consistently — both are listed below.
UNC Infectious Diseases Clinic. The UNC Infectious Diseases Clinic in Chapel Hill is the Ryan White Part C grantee for central North Carolina, serving about 2,400 people living with HIV; UNC is the training home for the NC AIDS Training and Education Center, which certifies HIV primary-care providers across the state.
RAIN (Regional AIDS Interfaith Network). RAIN in Charlotte is a Ryan White Part B case-management contractor for the western half of North Carolina and operates the state's only faith-community-partnered HIV program, serving roughly 1,200 clients across Mecklenburg, Gaston, Union, and Iredell counties.
For Black families in North Carolina
The South carries the heaviest HIV burden in the country: Black Southern residents make up roughly 14% of the U.S. population but account for more than half of new Black HIV diagnoses nationally. Black patients are less likely to be offered PEP in the emergency department than white patients with comparable exposures, per published ED-utilization research. If you're in North Carolina and you show up at an ED within 72 hours of a possible exposure, advocate for yourself: ask specifically for 'HIV post-exposure prophylaxis' and the infectious-diseases consult. The community organizations listed below can also coordinate a same-day PEP dispense at their clinic in most metros.
Named HIV testing + PrEP sites in North Carolina
UNC Infectious Diseases Clinic
Chapel Hill, NC • 1-919-966-4000
RAIN — Regional AIDS Interfaith Network Charlotte
Charlotte, NC • 1-704-372-7246
Rosedale Health & Wellness Center — Charlotte
Charlotte, NC • 1-704-948-8582
Alliance of AIDS Services Carolina — Raleigh
Raleigh, NC • 1-919-834-2437
Southerners on New Ground (SONG) Health Testing Events — Durham
Raleigh, NC • 1-404-549-8645
Winston-Salem State University — North Carolina AIDS Education & Training Center
Winston-Salem, NC • 1-336-716-2011
Guilford County Division of Public Health — Sexual Health Clinic
Greensboro, NC • 1-336-641-3245
Where to get help in North Carolina
- North Carolina HIV info line: 1-919-733-7301 — staff can find the nearest free testing site, schedule PrEP, or help enroll you in ADAP.
- North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Communicable Disease Branch landing page: https://epi.dph.ncdhhs.gov/cd/hiv.html.
- Federally Qualified Health Centers in North Carolina: every FQHC offers sliding-scale HIV testing and has certified application counselors on staff. See our FQHC directory for the state at /clinics/nc/.
- State health data for North Carolina: for state-level HIV mortality, maternal health, and life-expectancy context by race, see /health/north-carolina/.
- North Carolina Medicaid: Medicaid is the largest single payer of HIV care in most states. See /medicaid/north-carolina/ for eligibility + enrollment.
References & primary sources
- North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Communicable Disease Branch: https://epi.dph.ncdhhs.gov/cd/hiv.html.
- CDC HIV Surveillance Report 2022: cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance.html. Source for state-level new diagnoses and race-stratified counts.
- HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau, Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program grantee list: ryanwhite.hrsa.gov/grants/part-b.
- NASTAD ADAP Monitoring Project 2024 Annual Report: nastad.org/adap-monitoring-project. Source for ADAP income cap + enrollment + PrEP-DAP data.
- AIDSVu state profile: aidsvu.org/state/north-carolina/.
- CDC PEP guidelines, non-occupational exposure: cdc.gov/hiv/clinicians/prevention/pep.html.
Data refreshed: