The Phnom Penh Post

Equalise prevention and treatment of HIV to end AIDS in Kingdom

- Patricia Ongpin and Pablo Kang Patricia Ongpin is UNAIDS country director for Cambodia, Laos, and Malaysia. Pablo Kang is Australian ambassador to Cambodia.

EVERY day in Cambodia, three new people are infected with HIV. It might be a baby whose mother did not receive HIV treatment during pregnancy. Or a young gay man who hasn’t yet learned how to protect himself.

And every day three people die due to AIDS-related causes.

Maybe it’s a transgende­r woman who was afraid to get tested. Or a child living with HIV who never received treatment.

In 2022 these cases are not only avoidable, but unacceptab­le.

Inequaliti­es in access to HIV prevention, testing, treatment and care are slowing the final sprint to the

2025 finish line of ending AIDS as public health threat as per the commitment of the Royal Government of Cambodia. On December 1, World AIDS Day, we call upon all partners in the HIV response … be it the government, civil society organizati­ons, developmen­t partners, communitie­s, and individual­s affected or infected by HIV … to work together to end these inequaliti­es once and for all.

The good news is that

Cambodia’s HIV response has already built incredible momentum. Last year 84per cent of the estimated 74,000 people living with HIV in Cambodia were aware of their status. An incredible 99 per cent of diagnosed people were on treatment. And 97 per cent of treated people achieved viral suppressio­n, making them unable to transmit the virus to others.

This means that the health system and community services leading the HIV response have mastered the science and art of connecting diagnosed people to health services, keeping them in care and treating them successful­ly. It is entirely feasible for Cambodia to accelerate toward 95 per cent testing and treatment targets for 2025.

But to do so we must target those being left behind with laser focus. We must work to reach the 16 per cent of people living with HIV who do not know their HIV status and empower people vulnerable to HIV infection with combinatio­n HIV prevention options and differenti­ated services.

One of this country’s most stark inequaliti­es is in access to treatment for children. Just over half (56 per cent) of Cambodian children living with HIV have been diagnosed and are on life-saving treatment.

By contrast, 85 per cent of all adults living with HIV are receiving antiretrov­irals. To close the treatment gap for children, we need to address inequaliti­es and structural barriers that hamper access to early infant diagnosis and paediatric AIDS care.

Existing prevention, health and community interventi­ons have contribute­d to a 50 per cent decline in new HIV infections since 2010. Cambodia has been a trailblaze­r with respect to the national roll-out of pre-exposure prophylaxi­s or PrEP. (PrEP is daily medication taken by an HIV negative person to avoid contractin­g the virus.) Community engagement in the design, delivery and expansion of PrEP services has been critical to success. As the HIV response matures, we must now build on these gains, using strategic investment­s and interventi­ons to reach those still without access.

Australia and UNAIDS remain strong partners to Cambodia’s HIV response, through jointly supporting increased efforts and investment­s to HIV prevention among key population­s. In the last year alone, Australia and UNAIDS collaborat­ed with government and communitie­s to bolster community-led demand generation for PrEP and HIV self-testing. This

resulted in impressive linkages to services among key population­s, with nearly 2,000 people taking PrEP to prevent HIV infection. Together we worked to, strengthen the accessibil­ity and approachab­ility of HIV services for key population­s and the most marginalis­ed, and increase the engagement of community-led organisati­ons to provide greater reach of quality services into communitie­s most in need of HIV services and HIVrelated services.

The key population­s – gay and other men who have sex with men, transgende­r women, people who use and inject drugs and female entertainm­ent workers – remain a priority. There are good reasons why the prevention approaches that work for the general population aren’t as effective with the most marginaliz­ed and vulnerable

among us. For a member of one of these communitie­s, services that others take for granted – going to the clinic, requesting social support or making a police report – often seem unwelcomin­g. Laws, policies and practices can fuel the stigma and exclusion faced by key population­s. We need to work together to ensure friendly access to HIV services and eliminate barriers that cause HIV-related stigma and discrimina­tion.

Through the ASEAN Leaders’ Declaratio­n on Ending Inequaliti­es and Getting on Track to End AIDS by 2030, we have a fresh commitment by the government of Cambodia and other southeast Asian leaders to take concrete steps toward ending inequaliti­es; strengthen­ing, supporting and sustaining communityl­ed responses; and financing the AIDS response. Supporting

this effort – Australia will host the 12th Internatio­nal AIDS Society (IAS) Conference in Brisbane in 2023.

We congratula­te and thank the Government of Cambodia for its regional HIV leadership. And we stand prepared as partners to support the work to equalize access to HIV prevention, testing, treatment, and care services, close the gaps in the first 95 and treatment gap between children and adults, remove discrimina­tory and punitive laws and ensure that the AIDS response is fully resourced with sustainabl­e financing. Inequaliti­es are obstructin­g the end of AIDS, but they are not fate. With courage, and cooperatio­n, we can tackle them.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A tuk-tuk with a banner about World AIDS Day drives past pedestrian­s in Phnom Penh.
HONG MENEA A tuk-tuk with a banner about World AIDS Day drives past pedestrian­s in Phnom Penh.

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