 The study evaluated the effectiveness of a participatory comic intervention in increasing post-exposure prophylaxis, PEP, knowledge and acceptance, and preventing sexual and gender-based violence among refugee youth aged 16 to 24 years in BDBD refugee settlement, Uganda. The intervention used comics as a low-cost, low-literacy, and youth-friendly method to share health-promoting information. The study found significant increases in PEP knowledge and acceptance by standard efficacy, resilient coping, decreases in sexual violence stigma and depression, and increased empathy among participants. The survivor-informed participatory comic books are a promising approach for advancing HIV prevention through increased PEP acceptance and reduced sexual violence stigma with refugee youth. This article was authored by Carmen H. Loji, Moses Okumu, Miranda Loutet, and others.