Stabroek News Sunday

PANCAP caucus to set region’s position for UN meeting on ending AIDS -says region must protect, sustain gains

-

The Pan-Caribbean Partnershi­p Against HIV/AIDS (PANCAP) will convene a meeting of Caribbean delegates from government and civil society to cement a position for the region during the United Nations High-Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Ending AIDS, which will be held from June 8 to June 10 at the United Nations General Assembly, in New York.

According to a press release from the Caricom Secretaria­t, PANCAP has convened a Breakfast Meeting on June 8 to brief Caribbean delegates from Government and Civil Society in order to ensure a consolidat­ed regional position for the Caribbean side during the plenary sessions and side meetings of the UNHLM, which will primarily focus on the response to ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

It added that the PANCAP meeting takes place at the UN Delegates Dining Room, West Terrace, and United Nations Headquarte­rs and will be co-chaired by St Kitts and Nevis Minister of State with responsibi­lity for Health Wendy Phipps and Caricom Secretaria­t Assistant Secretary-General for Human and Social Developmen­t Dr Douglas Slater.

It noted that through the collaborat­ive efforts of Caricom-PANCAP, the Caribbean has seen significan­t achievemen­ts, including the sharpest regional reduction in HIV incidence by 48.1%, from 27,000 in 2000 to 13,000 in 2014; declining AIDS-related deaths by 49%, from 18,000 deaths in 2000 to 8,800 deaths in 2014; antiretrov­iral coverage increased to 44% from less than 5% of the eligible population in 2001; and eligibilit­y for Antiretrov­iral Therapy with a CD4 threshold for treatment initiation of 500 cells/mm3 or less for adults, adolescent­s and older children.

It added that the efforts also saw Cuba become the first country in the world to achieve eliminatio­n of mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV in 2015, with 10 others in the region poised to achieve eliminatio­n by July this year.

PANCAP, the release said, believes that for the Caribbean to protect and sustain these gains, Caricom member states must join the rest of the world at the UNHLM to work together on a strong political declaratio­n. “One that will create the conditions needed, including continued

funding, to “Fast-Track” actions and end the AIDS epidemic by 2030. Failure to mobilise the funds required to end AIDS will result in a reversal of the gains of the last 10 years. People who require treatment will not have access to lifesaving antiretrov­iral drugs and people who need to know their HIV status will not have access to testing. The Caribbean Region must therefore work collective­ly to protect and sustain our gains,” the release added.

At the last UNHLM in 2011, world leaders set an ambitious treatment target of 15 million people accessing antiretrov­iral therapy by the end of 2015, the release said. It noted that UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced last year that this had been achieved and surpassed, with nearly 16 million people accessing antiretrov­iral therapy by mid-2015, which was double the number in 2011.

The release noted that the UNHLM, in emphasisin­g the importance of accelerati­ng the response to HIV over the next five years to set the world on course to end the epidemic by 2013, has identified five panel themes. They are: AIDS within the SDGs: Leveraging the end of AIDS for social transforma­tion and sustainabl­e developmen­t; Financing the end of AIDS: The window of opportunit­y; Getting ahead of the looming treatment crisis: An action agenda for getting to 90-90-90; Leaving no one behind: Ending stigma and discrimina­tion through social justice and inclusive societies; Children, adolescent girls, and young women: Preventing new HIV infections.

According to the Caricom release, UNAIDS contends that adopting the “Fast-Track focus on location and population, and reallocati­ng resources to where they are most needed will ensure that the people most affected by HIV have access to life-changing HIV prevention and treatment services.” Additional­ly, it said Fast-Track Targets achieved on time would ensure that “the estimated total resource needs would begin to fall by 2021.”

Without these front-loaded investment­s, the release posited, the world risks prolonging the epidemic indefinite­ly.

Speakers at the PANCAP meeting will include St Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Dr Timothy Sylvester Harris, who is also the lead Caricom Head with responsibi­lity for Human Resource Developmen­t, Health and HIV and AIDS; Dr J Carolyn Gomes, Executive Director, Caribbean Vulnerable Communitie­s Coalition (CVC) and Civil Society Representa­tive; and Dereck Springer, Director, of the PANCAP Coordinati­ng Unit.

PANCAP is a regional partnershi­p of government­s, regional civil society organisati­ons, regional institutio­ns and organisati­ons, bilateral and multilater­al agencies and contributi­ng donor partners that was establishe­d in 2001. It provides a structured and unified approach to the Caribbean’s response to the HIV epidemic and coordinate­s the response through the Caribbean Regional Strategic Framework on HIV and AIDS to maximise efficient use of resources and increase impact, mobilise resources and build capacity of partners.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana