GENEVA - More than six million people could die from HIV and AIDS in the next four years if U.S. President Donald Trump's administration pulls its global funding for programs, the United Nations AIDS ...
In South Africa, a 36-year-old living with HIV since childhood fears she will lose access to treatment due to Trump’s policy.
Since 1999, Feb. 7 has marked National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, drawing attention to the disproportionate impact of HIV ...
The abrupt stop work order at the USAID has left thousands in medical danger, requiring doctors to weigh their ethics against ...
The withdrawal of funding by the United States for international aid programs could result in the deaths of more than 6 ...
In observance of Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, we are called to reflect on the ongoing epidemic and its disproportionate ...
The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) said that the reduction in US foreign aid funding is causing "a lot ...
When growing gang violence and the kidnappings of health care workers forced Haiti’s leading organization in the treatment of HIV and AIDS-related illnesses to relocate operations from its main site i ...
The Ministry of Health has recommended an increase in its budget to support the integration of essential HIV test kits, drugs ...
On his 2nd-term inauguration day, Trump froze foreign aid, triggering an immediate crisis in South Africa, which battles one of the worst HIV/AIDS epidemics.
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) has recently undergone significant workforce reductions, with the ...
Nigerians react as Trump halts HIV/AIDS funding, calling it racist and inhumane, while Tinubu approves local funding to cut ...