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Use of anti-HIV pills down by two-fifths after aid cuts

Use of anti-HIV pills down by two-fifths after aid cuts
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The number of people taking a vital anti-HIV drug has fallen by almost two-fifths in just one year in the aftermath of swinging aid cuts, the United Nations has warned. Between 2024 and 2025, the use of PrEP – a daily medicine that stops people contracting HIV – fell by an average of 38 per cent across 62 countries, according to initial data from UNAIDS published on Friday. In many places hit hard by the disease, this reduction is far higher – Nigeria, Cameroon, Uganda and Kenya have all...

The number of people taking a vital anti-HIV drug has fallen by almost two-fifths in just one year in the aftermath of swinging aid cuts, the United Nations has warned. Between 2024 and 2025, the use of PrEP – a daily medicine that stops people contracting HIV – fell by an average of 38 per cent across 62 countries, according to initial data from UNAIDS published on Friday. In many places hit hard by the disease, this reduction is far higher – Nigeria, Cameroon, Uganda and Kenya have all reported drops of more than 50 per cent. Dr Mary Mahy, the director for Data Impact at UNAIDS, told the Telegraph it was the first time in the history of the HIV/Aids response that prevention efforts have gone backwards. “PrEP took a long time to roll out – it was available in 2012, but it took countries time to figure out how to move forward with it or generate the demand,” she said. “But since then, it’s only been an uphill drive… never in the whole HIV epidemic have we seen [rates] coming down with prevention efforts.” The annual UNAIDS report, published ahead of a UN General Assembly meeting on HIV and Aids later this month, said the early data demonstrates that slashed international aid budgets are threatening decades of progress in the fight against the deadly disease. It is now 18 months since President Donald Trump’s new administration – with the help of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) – began to dismantle the world’s largest aid agency, USAID, and introduced sweeping aid cuts. Other countries have since followed suit, including France, Germany and the UK – where Labour has overseen a real-term aid budget reduction of 40 per cent. While many said the sector needed reform, the speed, severity and haphazardness of the cuts have left humanitarian organisations reeling. “This is the most serious disruption in the HIV response since the world came together to fight this disease,” Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of UNAIDS, told AFP. She said progress against HIV had already started to slow, but “is now in peril because of sudden cuts”. Although 50 countries have committed to increase their national HIV funding, Dr Byanima added that “the new domestic resources coming in won’t replace what is going away”.
the United Nations (ORG) UNAIDS (ORG) Nigeria (LOCATION) Cameroon (LOCATION) Uganda (LOCATION) Kenya (LOCATION) Mary Mahy (PERSON) Data Impact (ORG) Telegraph (LOCATION) UN General Assembly (ORG) Donald Trump (PERSON) Elon Musk’s (PERSON) Department of Government Efficiency (ORG) Doge (PERSON) USAID (ORG)
Originally published by The Telegraph Read original →