UNAIDS warns that a major spike in HIV infections and deaths could occur if the US follows through on freezing foreign aid for HIV programs.
While the United States’ 90-day pause on foreign assistance has impacted the global AIDS response, U.S. Department of State waivers have allowed the resumption of HIV treatment and prevention of ...
But now, that progress is at risk. The recent pause in United States foreign assistance poses a direct threat to the lives ...
More than 20 years ago, the U.S. became the leader in the worldwide fight against HIV/AIDS. The Bush administration ...
HIV infections have been falling in recent years, with just 1.3 million new cases recorded in 2023, a 60 per cent decline since the virus peaked in 1995.
UNAIDS chief, Winnie Byanyima, said there could be 8.7 million people newly infected with HIV by 2029 following US President ...
In this file photo dated Monday, April 8, 2019, shows the headquarters building of UNAIDS in Geneva, Switzerland.
Winnie Byanyima, executive director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS, says global HIV infections ...
The US pause in foreign assistance funding has created "confusion" in the vital work of community HIV prevention, despite a ...
In Africa, a U.S. funding loss will be critical to HIV programs in countries like Uganda, Mozambique and Tanzania.