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UNAIDS warns of millions of AIDS-related deaths and continued devastation from pandemics if leaders don鈥檛 address inequalities

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UNAIDS warns of millions of AIDS-related deaths and continued devastation from pandemics if leaders don鈥檛 address inequalities

Ending inequalities is a political choice that requires bold policy reforms and money
1 December 2021
By: 
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The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has issued a stark warning that if leaders fail to tackle inequalities the world could face 7.7 million* AIDS-related deaths over the next 10 years.听

UNAIDS further warns that if the transformative measures needed to end AIDS are not taken, the world will听also听stay trapped in the COVID-19 crisis听and听remain dangerously unprepared for the pandemics to come.

鈥淭his is an urgent call to action,鈥 said UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima.听

鈥淧rogress against the AIDS pandemic, which was already off track, is now under even greater strain as the COVID-19 crisis continues to rage, disrupting HIV prevention and treatment services, schooling, violence-prevention programmes and more,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e cannot be forced to choose between ending the AIDS pandemic today and preparing for the pandemics of tomorrow. The only successful approach will achieve both. As of now, we are not on track to achieve either.鈥

The warning comes in a听听launched ahead of听听别苍迟颈迟濒别诲听Unequal, unprepared, under threat: why bold action against inequalities is needed to end AIDS, stop COVID-19 and prepare for future pandemics.

Some countries, including some with the highest rates of HIV, have made remarkable progress against AIDS, illustrating what is feasible.听

However, new HIV infections are not falling fast enough globally to stop the pandemic, with 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2020 and growing HIV infection rates in some countries.听

Infections are also following lines of inequality. Six in seven new HIV infections among adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa are occurring among adolescent girls.听

Gay men and other men who have sex with men, sex workers and people who use drugs face a 25鈥35 times greater risk of acquiring HIV worldwide.

COVID-19 is undercutting the AIDS response in many places.听

The pace of HIV testing declined almost uniformly and fewer people living with HIV initiated treatment in 2020 in 40 of 50 countries reporting to UNAIDS.听

HIV prevention services have been impacted鈥攊n 2020, harm reduction services for people who use drugs were disrupted in 65% of 130 countries surveyed.

鈥淚t is still possible to end the epidemic by 2030,鈥 affirmed United Nations Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres in his World AIDS Day message. 鈥淏ut that will require stepped up action and greater solidarity. To beat AIDS鈥攁nd build resilience against the pandemics of tomorrow鈥攚e need collective action.鈥

This new report from UNAIDS examines five critical elements听of the plan agreed by Member States at the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Meeting on AIDS that must be urgently implemented to halt the AIDS pandemic and which are critical but under-funded and under-prioritized for pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response.听

These include:

  • Community-led and community-based infrastructure.
  • Equitable access to medicines, vaccines, and health technologies.
  • Supporting workers on the pandemic front lines.
  • 听Human rights at the centre of pandemic responses.
  • People-centred data systems that highlight inequalities.听

The call for upscaled investments and shifts in laws and policies to end the inequalities that drive AIDS and other pandemics is backed by leaders in global health and pandemic response from across the world.

鈥淚f听鈥嬧媤e do not take the steps needed to tackle the inequalities driving HIV today, not only will we fail to end the AIDS pandemic, but we will also leave our world dangerously unprepared for future pandemics,鈥 said Helen Clark, Co-Chair of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, in a special foreword to the UNAIDS report.

鈥淧andemics find space to grow in the fractures of divided societies. The amazing scientists, doctors, nurses and communities who work to end pandemics cannot succeed unless world leaders take the steps that will enable them to do so,鈥 she added.

Leader can act boldly

UNAIDS and global health experts emphasize that while business as usual would kill millions and leave the world trapped with colliding pandemics going on for decades, leaders can, by acting boldly and together to tackle the inequalities in which pandemics thrive, end AIDS, overcome the COVID-19 crisis and be protected from the pandemic threats of the future.

鈥淧athogens ranging from HIV to the virus behind COVID-19 invade the cracks and fissures in our society with startling opportunism,鈥 said Paul Farmer of Partners in Health, a nonprofit that for decades has effectively treated AIDS in settings of material poverty.

鈥淭hat the AIDS pandemic is shaped by deep structural inequalities need not resign us to inaction, however. Our teams, in rural Haiti and across the world, have routinely shown that with comprehensive care delivery, robust forms of accompaniment and social support and a larger dose of social justice, disparities in HIV outcomes can be rapidly narrowed, and health systems swiftly strengthened. We shouldn鈥檛 settle for anything less,鈥澨齢e said.

This year marks 40 years since the first cases of AIDS were reported. Since that time, where investments have met ambition, there has been huge progress, particularly in expanding access to treatment.听

By June 2021, 28.2 million people had access to HIV treatment, up from 7.8 million in 2010, although progress has slowed considerably.

Countries with laws and policies aligned to evidence, strong community engagement and participation and robust and inclusive health systems have had the best outcomes, whereas the regions with the largest resource gaps and countries with punitive laws and that have not taken a rights-based approach to health have fared the worst.

鈥淲e know what works from seeing brilliant AIDS responses in some places,鈥 said Ms Byanyima, 鈥渂ut we need to apply that everywhere for everyone. We have an effective strategy that leaders adopted this year, but it needs to be implemented in full. Ending inequalities to end AIDS is a political choice that requires bold policy reforms and requires money. We have reached a fork in the road. The choice for leaders to make is between bold action and half-measures.鈥

* The estimate of 7.7 million AIDS-related deaths between 2021 and 2030 is what UNAIDS models predict if HIV service coverage is held constant at 2019 levels. If the Global AIDS Strategy2021鈥2026: End Inequalities, End AIDS is executed and the 2025 targets are achieved, UNAIDS estimates that at least 4.6 million of those deaths can be averted over the decade.

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