Sentinel & Enterprise

Us-backed group gets lifesaving meds to the Ukrainians

- By Ricardo Alonsozald­ivar

WASHINGTON » Thousands of patients in Ukraine are receiving lifesaving medicines to treat HIV and opioid addiction through a U.s.-funded group still operating despite the Russian invasion. Supplies are running short and making deliveries is a complicate­d calculus with unpredicta­ble risks.

Officials say the quiet work of the Alliance for Public Health shows how American assistance is reaching individual­s in the besieged nation, on a different wavelength from U.S. diplomatic and military support for the Ukrainian government.

The Ukraine-based humanitari­an organizati­on has operated for more than 20 years. It has received millions of dollars from the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t as well as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other federal programs to counter HIV globally.

Executive director Andriy Klepikov said shutting down was not an option during the invasion. Ukraine has one of the most serious HIV epidemics in Western Europe, and patients need their medication­s daily.

He said his group made a “risk management plan” to continue its work if fighting broke out. But it did not envision the scale of the onslaught unleashed by Russian forces, and that has forced the group to adapt.

In areas of Ukraine that have escaped the worst, the organizati­on is still able to deliver medication­s via postal and parcel services. For refugees who have left the country, caseworker­s are making connection­s with aid groups that can restock medication­s. In places under attack but still in Ukrainian control, medical vans are bringing in supplies via convoys.

The group has even been able to get some deliveries into Russian-controlled areas, with the help of intermedia­ries. It also is distributi­ng medicines for tuberculos­is.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Cars drive past a destroyed Russian tank as a convoy of vehicles evacuating civilians leaves Irpin, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, on March 9. Thousands of patients in Ukraine are receiving lifesaving medicines to treat HIV and opioid addiction through a U.s.-funded group still operating despite the Russian invasion
AP FILE Cars drive past a destroyed Russian tank as a convoy of vehicles evacuating civilians leaves Irpin, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, on March 9. Thousands of patients in Ukraine are receiving lifesaving medicines to treat HIV and opioid addiction through a U.s.-funded group still operating despite the Russian invasion

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