USAID’s defunding by the Trump administration leaves humanitarian programs globally in tatters, and an opportunity to expand soft diplomacy that Australia still looks unwilling to fill.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has become the first British PM and G7 leader to publicly take an HIV test on-camera ... aiming to end new HIV cases in the UK by 2030. Around 4,700 people in ...
London (AFP) – Keir Starmer has urged other world leaders to take an HIV test, after becoming the first serving British prime minister and G7 leader to take a public test on camera. His office ...
In support of National HIV Testing week, the Prime Minister has undertaken a public rapid HIV home test, available for free, in 10 Downing Street. He is the first serving British Prime Minister and G7 ...
Starmer in December committed his government to ending new HIV cases in England by 2030, with a new “HIV action plan” detailing how it will meet the target to be published later this year.
In an interview with The Associated Press, UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said HIV infections have been falling in recent years, with just 1.3 million new cases recorded in 2023 ...
But it is also a reminder that HIV is real, and so is hope. Awareness and prevention make the difference. The number of HIV cases in the Cordillera ... Dr. Chhim Sarath, AHF Asia bureau chief ...
4don MSN
The head of the U.N. AIDS agency says the number of new HIV infections could jump more than six times by 2029 if American ...
But the 52-year-old Atlanta mother has faced repeated challenges getting the lifesaving drug that can prevent new HIV infections ... That amounts to about 2,500 new cases diagnosed in Georgia ...
Since the scheme was launched three months ago, six new cases of HIV have been diagnosed, with four further patients identified who were not receiving treatment. Dr Mark Aldersley, consultant ...
UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said HIV infections have been falling in recent years, with just 1.3 million new cases recorded in 2023, a 60% decline since the virus peaked in 1995.
Antiretroviral treatment has increased the life expectancy of people living with HIV in British Columbia but a new study shows it is significantly lower for women than men. The BC Centre for ...
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