The prevalence of antibody against human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV), which rose among British homosexual/bisexual men attending a London sexually-transmitted-disease clinic from 3.7% (4/107) in March, 1982, to 21% (26/124) in July, 1984, was 18.1% (17/94) in April/May 1985, 24.5% (61/249) in January, 1986, and 25.3% (25/99) in November/December, 1986. This slower rise in anti-HIV prevalence coincided with a fall in the annual gonorrhoea rate from 15.3% in 1982 to 5.1% in the first half of 1986 in the same male homosexual clinic population. Over the same period a reduction in the number of sexual partners and a change to safer sexual practices has been documented among homosexual and bisexual men taking part in a prospective study of the natural history of HIV infection. These data support the value of continuing preventive efforts to control viral spread in the absence of an effective vaccine or therapy.