The UN’s AIDS organisation recently hailed an increase in the numbers of HIV-positive people getting treatment. It also credited community-based programmes as the key to fighting the HIV/AIDS disease.
At the launch of a new report ahead of World AIDS Day Sunday, UNAIDS said 24.5 million HIV-positive people were receiving treatment by mid-2019. This number makes up about two-thirds of the population infected with the virus worldwide.
The latest figures represented an increase of 1.2 million people getting treatment in six months, said UNAIDS. However, it was still below their target of 30 million people on antiretroviral therapy by the end of 2020.
Experts and campaigners with the organisation underlined the importance of community-led services in HIV prevention, testing and treatment.
“I would not be alive today physically or emotionally without community,” UNAIDS’ community mobilisation adviser Laurel Sprague told reporters.
Sprague cited the value of “peer support, information, outreach and advocacy that communities did in the early days of the epidemic and continue to do today”.
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“Communities leading from the front are our best hope of ending AIDS,” said UNAIDS’ new executive director Winnie Byanyima.
Communities partnering with the government — both in health and research sectors — was the “gold standard” for disease response.
Activists and their communities “are our best bet of getting people on to treatment and keeping them there,” said Byanyima.
But the new UNAIDS report, “Power to the People”, also said that 1.7 million people were newly infected with the virus in 2018.
Four out of five of those newly infected consisted of girls aged between 10 and 19. Also, many of them are in sub-Saharan Africa, said the report.
Byanyima called for “a feminist approach to HIV”. It “will equalise power and transform the health and development agenda for women and girls and all key populations”.
Meanwhile, an estimated 37.9 million people now live with HIV, according to UN figures.