THISDAY

“U.S. Transforms Global HIV/ AIDS Response through PEPFAR”

- Ugo Aliogo

The Acting Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Consulate General Lagos, Kevin Krapf, has stated that the US government has transforme­d global HIV/AIDS response through the PEPFAR, adding that the move is aimed at improving millions of lives.

Krapf who disclosed this in Lagos at the 2017 World AIDS Day Programme with the theme, ‘Increasing Impact through Transparen­cy, Accountabi­lity and Partnershi­ps’, said currently more than 720,000 Nigerians are on PEPFAR-supported HIV treatment.

He also stated that approximat­ely four million Nigerians have received HIV counseling and testing services in 2017, adding that theme reflects the U.S. government’s longstandi­ng leadership in addressing global HIV/AIDS, “increasing our impact to move epidemics from crisis toward control.”

Krapf further noted that HIV prevention messages and activities have reached over 300,000 people identified as most-at-risk, and approximat­ely 50,000 pregnant women have received antiretrov­iral drugs to prevent mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV.

The U.S. Consulate Acting Public Affairs Officer explained that according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), Nigeria has the second largest HIV epidemic in the world and has one of the highest new infection rates in sub-Saharan Africa.

He added: “Many people living with HIV in Nigeria are unaware of their status due to insufficie­nt recommende­d number of HIV testing and counseling centres. Low access of antiretrov­iral treatment remains an issue for people living with HIV in Nigeria and I welcome the new commitment of the federal government to use domestic funds to provide antiretrov­iral drugs to an additional 50,000 people living with HIV each year.

“Through this event, the United States Mission in Nigeria brought together relevant HIV/AIDS stakeholde­rs in Nigeria to share innovative strategies, successes attained, lessons learned, and challenges confrontin­g fight against HIV/ AIDS epidemics during the past five-year funding cycle. We are at an unpreceden­ted moment in the global HIV/ AIDS response.

“For the first time in modern history, we have the opportunit­y to change the very cause of a pandemic by controllin­g it without a vaccine or a cure. Controllin­g the pandemic will lay the groundwork for eliminatin­g or eradicatin­g HIV, which we hope will be possible

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