News

The US helped prevent AIDS from being a death sentence in Africa. Now the epidemic is at a crossroads ...
UNAIDS Warns Funding Collapse Puts Decades of HIV Progress at RiskThe Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has warned that decades of progress in addressing AIDS are at risk after a ...
The United States’ decision to make cuts to the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief ( PEPFAR) could result in six ...
Some poorer nations hit by cuts in HIV/AIDS funding from rich donors have boosted their own spending in response, but not ...
President George W. Bush stunned the world by proposing PEPFAR, providing wide access to HIV treatment in poor nations decimated by AIDS.
The US helped prevent AIDS from being a death sentence in Africa. Now the epidemic is at a crossroads ...
Twenty years ago, HIV/AIDS was a death sentence in Africa. Today, the it is considered by many to be a manageable condition like diabetes, thanks in no small part to an extraordinarily successful ...
U.S. aid cuts to global AIDS programs spark warnings of millions of deaths, as clinics close and progress unravels in ...
The chaos and uncertainty surrounding vital AIDS relief programs have needlessly threatened millions of lives, writes Drs. Cassidy Claassen and Michael Herce.
Why has sub-Saharan Africa been so successful? Countries in sub-Saharan Africa have made huge gains in improving awareness of HIV and increasing access to HIV testing and treatment.
President George W. Bush’s reputation may have been forever complicated by 9/11 and war, but a proposal he made in his 2003 State of the Union address became a historic humanitarian success, one ...