NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Battles won – and lost – against Aids hold valuable lessons for managing COVID-19

- Linda-Gail Bekker/ Carey Pike

WORLD Aids Day this year finds us immersed in another pandemic — COVID-19.

The highly infectious coronaviru­s has swept across the world, devastatin­g health systems and laying waste to economies as government­s introduced drastic measures to contain its spread. Not since the HIV/ Aids pandemic of the 1990s have countries faced such a common health threat.

This explains why UNAids has selected the theme Global Solidarity, Shared Responsibi­lity for this year’s World Aids Day.

Infectious diseases such as these remain a major threat to human health and prosperity. Around 32,7 million people have died from Aids-related illnesses in the last 40 years. At the time of writing, 1,4 million people had already died from COVID-19 in just one year.

These diseases take incredible expertise, collaborat­ion and dedication from all levels of society to track, understand, treat and prevent.

The HIV/Aids response played out over a much longer trajectory than COVID-19. But it is, in some respects, a shining example of what can be achieved when countries and people work together. The work of organisati­ons such as the World Health Organisati­on, UNAids and the Internatio­nal Aids Society help to co-ordinate rapid sharing of informatio­n and resources between healthcare providers and communitie­s.

The Global Fund and PEPFAR have mobilised resources that have helped to reduce morbidity and mortality in lowand middle-income regions. Aids-related deaths have declined worldwide by 39% since 2010.

These and other groups have also fought against high drug prices that would render medication inaccessib­le to many in the developing world. In South Africa, the epicentre of the HIV epidemic, a day’s supply of the simplest anti-retroviral­s cost about R250 in 2002. Today easier, more palatable treatment taken once per day costs a few rands.

Collaborat­ion and co-ordination has also meant that medication­s have been developed and tested in population­s across the world. And once available, global guidelines and training opportunit­ies ensure that healthcare provision and quality is standardis­ed.

Many of these achievemen­ts did not come without a fight. Dedicated and sustained activism, at political and community levels were required to drive down drug pricing for the global south and is constantly required to ensure inclusive distributi­on of resources.

The corollary is also true — areas where the world continues to struggle arise predominan­tly where there is a lack of solidarity and agreement. These include a lack of political support to implement evidenceba­sed protection mechanisms for vulnerable or stigmatise­d population­s. For example the legalisati­on of homosexual­ity. This results in continued but avoidable HIV infection and related mortality.

These lessons need to be taken on board as the world prepares for the next phase of managing COVID-19. All the interventi­ons that helped contain and manage HIV and Aids are critical in ensuring that no country, regardless of developmen­tal status, and no population, especially those that face stigma and battle to access healthcare services, are left behind. Building on existing systems

The lessons learnt from HIV and Aids can be used to inform the COVID-19 response as the challenges are similar.

Many of the ongoing COVID-19 vaccine trials are taking place in multiple countries, including South Africa. The capacity to conduct these studies, including the clinical staff and trial sites, are well establishe­d as a result of decades of HIV/Aids research. There are fears that developing nations might be excluded from accessing an effective COVID-19 vaccine. But global mechanisms are now in place to avoid this and to, instead, encourage and enable global solidarity, some of which were championed by the HIV/Aids response.

The Access to COVID-9 Tools (ACT)Accelerato­r, establishe­d by the World Health Organisati­on in April 2020 in collaborat­ion with many other global organisati­ons, government­s, civil society and industry, have committed through the pillar known as Covax, to equitable distributi­on of a COVID-19 vaccine as well as diagnostic tests and treatments. These global institutio­ns and mechanisms require continued support.

With the deployment of an effective vaccine, an end to COVID-19 might soon be in sight. For HIV, vaccine developmen­t has been more complex and disappoint­ing. The global community needs to remain committed to promoting access and support for the many prevention and treatment options that are available. The unpreceden­ted effort on the part of private industry in the COVID-19 vaccine response shines a light on what can be achieved when all interested parties engage. The HIV and TB vaccine endeavours need a similar effort.

These are not the only pandemics the world will face. In fact, there are strong prediction­s that the emergence of new pandemics will increase in the future. This is due to the effects of globalisat­ion, climate change and proximity to wildlife.

The best hope for humanity is to not lose sight of what these pandemics cost us in terms of loved ones, in terms of freedom and economical­ly. We must prepare now collective­ly across countries and across all levels of society. These preparatio­ns need to be grounded in the lessons learnt from HIV/Aids and re-learnt from COVID-19. Social solidarity

The success of the global response to current and emerging pandemics will rely on the ability of the less vulnerable to acknowledg­e their shared responsibi­lity and respond to those calls.

An important truth of the HIV epidemic is that it doesn’t discrimina­te. No infectious disease acknowledg­es political borders and everybody is at risk of being infected or affected. If nothing else, because of this we need to continue to work together on a global scale knowing that “no one is safe, until everyone is safe”.

● This article was reproduced from The Conversati­on

● Linda-Gail Bekker is a professor of medicine and deputy director of the Desmond Tutu HIV Centre at the Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, University of Cape Town

● Carey Pike is an executive research assistant at the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation.

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