Waiters at an Asian restaurant hold condoms in their hands in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on November 8, … [+]
With another World AIDS Day behind us, this is an opportune moment to remember the nearly 40 million people who have lost their lives to this terrible disease. Yet it’s also a moment to recognise the extraordinary progress we have made in combatting HIV and AIDS. Since 2002, in the countries in which the Global Fund invests, deaths are down by 72% and new infections are down 61%.
By reducing the annual cost of HIV treatment from $10,000 in 2002, to just $45 today, we’ve been able to massively expand HIV treatment, prevention and care. Now 24.5 million people are on HIV treatment in the countries in which the Global Fund invests, and we have reversed the course of the pandemic.
Yet the fight against HIV remains unfinished. In 2022, there were 630,000 deaths due to AIDS and 1.3 million new infections. AIDS is still the biggest killer of women aged 18-45 in Africa. There are some 9 million people worldwide who are HIV positive, but not on treatment. Without treatment, half of all children born with HIV will die by the age of two.
To end a disease like HIV, we have to build more just and equal societies. Although we do not have a vaccine or a cure for HIV, we have powerful tools to prevent infections and allow those living with the virus to live long, healthy and happy lives. Yet, even the best biomedical tools are of limited value if the people who need them most cannot access them.
Key populations such as gay men and other men who have sex with men, sex workers, transgender people, people who inject drugs and people in prison, and their partners, continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV. Their vulnerability is a direct consequence of stigma and discrimination, criminalization, and other laws and policies that undermine human rights.
The fact that in some parts of Africa adolescent girls and young women are several times more likely than boys and young men of the same age to be infected with HIV is not really a a biomedical issue. It’s a consequence of structural gender inequalities, including economic disempowerment, educational disadvantage and gender-based violence.
Diseases like HIV expose the ugly fault lines within our societies. Human rights barriers are the reason why – 35 years after the first World AIDS Day – we are still off track in ending AIDS as a public health threat.
The Global Fund’s Strategy puts people and communities at the centre and commit us to do even more to tackle human rights related barriers, gender inequality and health inequity.
In making this aspiration concrete, we are building on the success of Breaking Down Barriers, the pioneering initiative we launched in 2017, and through which we supported 20 countries to develop and implement country-owned programs to address human rights related barriers to health services.
By engaging healthcare providers, law makers and enforcers, judges and parliamentarians, and by empowering communities, we have seen legal and policy changes and greater access to services. In these countries, investments in human rights programming have increased ten-fold.
Over the entire Global Fund portfolio, our investments in such programs amount to over $200 million. In the next grant cycle, we expect to see that number increase, and are adding 4 more countries to Breaking Down Barriers.
On this World AIDS Day, the imperative to protect and promote human rights has never been more important. Across the world, in both rich and poor countries alike, we are seeing an alarming erosion of such rights. And we are hearing the language of global solidarity and of our common humanity much less often. If we are to finish the job in defeating AIDS and deliver on the SDG3 objective of health and wellbeing for all, we must fight back.
In a world where it seems all too easy to dismiss the humanity of others, whether because of their gender or sexuality, their ethnicity, or their religion, or because they’re a migrant or refugee, we must rediscover the spirit of global solidarity. The Global Fund partnership is proof that when the world comes together to make the impossible, possible, we can do it.
If the erosion of human rights is the biggest challenge we face in the fight against HIV, the second biggest might be complacency. With more countries achieving the UNAIDS 95-95-95 target (meaning 95% of HIV positive people know their status, 95% of those are on treatment, and 95% of those on treatment are virally suppressed), and fewer people in positions of power feeling personally at risk, it’s becoming more challenging to sustain the political will and mobilize the resources to finish the fight. In a world where there are so many competing needs and crises, it is understandable that policymakers are tempted to switch focus and resources elsewhere. But slowing down now would be a huge mistake. In those countries where HIV and AIDS has been ignored or neglected, we have seen it resurge. Against a foe as formidable as HIV, anything less than victory is creating a future problem.
So, we must recommit to ending to the SDG3 goal of ending HIV and AIDS as a public health threat by 2030. We will not achieve this on the current trajectory, but we can achieve it, if we have the political will and muster the required resources. The global response to HIV/AIDS was a turning point in global health, an extraordinary expression of global solidarity that changed the way we think of people’s right to health. Now we must finish the task and achieve a world free of AIDS.
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