Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Inequaliti­es persist in HIV prevention

-

Nearly half of the 1.7 million children worldwide living with HIV were not on treatment last year, the UN program leading the global fight against HIV and AIDS, UNAIDS, said in a report released together with partners.

The final report from the Start Free, Stay Free, AIDS Free initiative, issued in Geneva, warns that progress on ending AIDS among children, adolescent­s and young women has stalled and requires urgent action.

The five-year framework began in 2015 and followed on from a global plan to reduce new HIV infections among children by that year, while also ensuring those living with HIV have access to antiretrov­iral therapy. The focus was on 23 countries, mostly in Africa.

The study shows that 150,000 children were newly infected, or four times more than the 2020 target of 40,000.

The total number of children on treatment also declined for the first time, despite the fact that nearly 800,000 children living with HIV are not currently on treatment.

Furthermor­e, opportunit­ies to identify infants and young children living with HIV early are being missed, as more than a third of children born to mothers living with the virus were not tested.

“Over 20 years ago, initiative­s for families and children to prevent vertical transmissi­on and to eliminate children dying of AIDS truly kick-started what has now become our global AIDS response. This stemmed from an unpreceden­ted activation of all partners, yet, despite early and dramatic progress, despite more tools and knowledge than ever before, children are falling way behind adults and way behind our goals,” Shannon Hader, Deputy Executive Director, Programme, at UNAIDS said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines