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US aid cuts could lead to millions more HIV/AIDS deaths by 2029, UN warns | HIV/AIDS News


United Nations 2025 Global AIDS Update says if funding not replaced, Trumpโ€™s cuts may reverse โ€˜decadesโ€™ of progress on HIV/AIDS.

Unless funding is replaced, the halt to foreign aid by the administration of US President Donald Trump could reverse โ€œdecades of progressโ€ on HIV, the United Nations warns in its annual report on HIV/AIDS.

The United Statesโ€™ decision to make cuts to the US Presidentโ€™s Emergency Plan for AIDS Reliefย (PEPFAR) could result in six million extra HIV infections and four million more AIDS-related deaths by 2029, according to the 2025 Global AIDS Update released on Thursday.

โ€œHIV programmes in low- and middle-income countries have been rocked by sudden, major financial disruptions that threaten to reverse years of progress in the response to HIV,โ€ the UNAIDS report said.

โ€œWars and conflict, widening economic inequalities, geopolitical shifts and climate change shocks โ€“ the likes of which are unprecedented in the global HIV response โ€“ are stoking instability and straining multilateral cooperation,โ€ it added.

According to the report, people acquiring HIV and those dying from AIDS-related causes were at their lowest levels in โ€œmore than 30 yearsโ€.

However, by the end of 2024, the decline in numbers was โ€œnot sufficientโ€ to end AIDS as a public threat by 2030.

Still, the report found that an estimated 1.3 million people acquired HIV in 2024, 40 percent less than in 2024.

In new infections, there was a 56 percent decline in sub-Saharan Africa, which is home to half of all people who โ€œacquired HIV globally in 2024โ€.

โ€œFive countries, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, were on track to achieve a 90 percent decline in new infections by 2030 compared with 2010,โ€ the UN added.

However, the significance of Trumpโ€™s cut to the programme is immense, as the US was the largest donor of humanitarian assistance worldwide.

โ€œThe sudden withdrawal of the single biggest contributor to the global HIV response disrupted treatment and prevention programmes around the world,โ€ the report said.

While many countries still have enough life-saving antiretroviral drugs and clinics that support those most vulnerable to the infection โ€“ including gay men, sex workers and teenage girls โ€“ the cut in funding has forced the facilities to close down and prevention programmes to peter out.

UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima told the Reuters news agency that โ€œprevention was hit harder than treatmentโ€ by the cuts.

โ€œKey populations were the worst affected โ€ฆ they depended on tailored services by community leaders, and those were the first to go,โ€ Byanyima said.

However, even before Trump made the decision to scale back the support shortly after coming into office in January, donors, mainly European countries, were scaling back development assistance.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve told us that it has to do with defence spending,โ€ she said, adding that figures showed โ€œglobal health [spending] peaked and then it also started declining with the Ukraine warโ€.

PEPFAR was launched in 2003 by US President George W Bush, and is the biggest-ever commitment by any country focused on a single disease. UNAIDS called the programme a โ€œlifelineโ€ for countries with high HIV rates.



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