People made a brazen proclamation last
year: The end of AIDS is approaching.
The fight against AIDS is not yet over and still requires a
lot of funding and resources at a time when both are at
a premium. Photo by: Jamison
Wieser / CC
BY-NC-SA
|
What began as a mysterious affliction
of the few and eventually infected 59 million people globally will be the topic
of discussion for around 25,000 participants at this year’s International AIDS Conference
in Washington, D.C. In between scientific presentations, high-level speeches
and rowdy side debates, two strands will weave throughout the events: hope that
the disease can finally be stopped and fear that no one will do it.
The fight against AIDS is
indeed at a critical juncture, with more tools than ever at our disposal for
prevention and treatment. But with every success comes the lingering fear that
achievement will breed complacency — or disinterest manifested as resources
withheld. A push for country ownership is welcome for some aspects of
development, but leaves health ministers fretting over the amount of domestic
money required if the United States — which funds almost half of the
global AIDS effort — claims mission complete and starts winding down
support.
In fact, the mission is not complete
at all. HIV is the leading cause of death for women of reproductive
age, and 2,400 young people aged 15 to 24 were infected with the virus
daily in 2011, according to a Joint U.N.
Program on HIV/AIDS fact sheet.
African countries are increasingly
being asked to find — and fund — their own solutions to the pandemic despite their lack of capacity to
do so, experts at Médecins Sans Frontières said in a statement. “Just as
success is within reach, we’re up against a great financial squeeze,” Malawian
health official Stuart Chuka said. “I truly believe we can end AIDS. But
we can’t do it alone.”
The myriad goals of the conference
include this recognition that AIDS is not over, and still requires a
lot of funding and resources at a time when both are at a premium.
The science of AIDS
The conference will also be a
scientific meeting — an opportunity to promote the availability of new
prevention tools and share information and experience gleaned from implementing
these tools in different settings. The U.S. Food and Drug
Administrationannounced July 16 that it approved a pill called Truvada, the first drug shown to reduce the risk of
HIV infection.
Conference organizers received 11,715
scientific abstracts for a peer-reviewed selection process covering
clinical science, epidemiology and preventive science, and other fields.
Scientists and practitioners alike are
keen to celebrate the success achieved in recent years. Last year’s
announcement forecasting the “end of AIDS” has been supported by small global decreases
in new infections and AIDS-related deaths, and increases in the number of
people receiving antiretroviral therapy. New infections in children fell by
nearly a quarter since 2009.
“The conference comes at a time when
we have the opportunity to make a final effort in reducing or eliminating HIV,”
Abt
Associates HIV and AIDS expert Liza Solomon said. “The question of
course is, are we able to take advantage of these opportunities?”
The economic crisis in general, and
the stagnation of HIV and AIDS funding in particular, are major
concerns for those who recognize that despite having more tools than ever at
our disposal, applying them costs money and requires difficult choices.
Money matters
Questions over funding will be front
and center at the conference. Global health resources peaked a few years ago at
around $27 billion per year, and are now contracting with near-term growth
unlikely, according to an essay by J. Stephen Morrison, director of the Global
Health Policy Center at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Nontraditional donors,
including BRICS countries, will be on the spot to step up and help
diversify funding for HIV and AIDS. They’ve actually done just that in recent
years: Low and middle-income countries invested $8.6 billion into the response
in 2011, up 11 percent year on year. Meanwhile, international funding remained
at 2008 levels ($8.2 billion), according to UNAIDS.
On a country level, there is a lot of
interest in identifying how to use national funds in combination with donor
funds to have the most impact, and how to allocate resources efficiently and
strategically, according to Donna Sherard, senior HIV communications
adviser at Population Services International’s sexual reproductive
health and tuberculosis department.
Treatment versus prevention
While strategic distribution of
resources sounds obvious, it’s extremely contentious when those resources are
life-saving medications or prevention tools.
Most countries currently get medicine
to 50 to 60 percent of those eligible. With a new focus on treatment as
prevention like Truvada, there will be a push to get medicines to people who
aren’t even infected yet but are deemed “high risk.”
This reframing of the treatment versus
prevention debate might preclude the shouting matches said to have erupted when
the topic came up at the plenary session of the last
International AIDS Conference in Vienna. “What we’ve learned is
prevention is treatment and we can’t look at them as being in
conflict with each other,” Solomon said.
But with too few resources to get
medications to all those who could benefit from them, it isn’t clear who should
decide the priorities.
That is a tough moral decision, and
one that complicates programming with choices that could pit public health
against clinical needs, according to John Palen, an international health expert
also with Abt Associates.
Palen forecast controversy at the
conference over the use of antiretrovirals for prevention. Some groups
already strongly opposed Truvada, claiming it could reduce
compliance with other preventive measures like wearing condoms or reducing the
number of sexual partners.
Social constructs
More tension could arise over the
“medicalization” of HIV, according to Solomon. People infected
with HIV often have a lot of social issues requiring support, and
giving them a pill and calling the problem solved would be naïve, she said.
These social issues are even more
apparent when dealing with marginalized populations at high risk, like men who
have sex with men, or commercial sex workers. Conference attendees may find
themselves in the middle of contentious debates over how strongly donors should
insist governments support a human rights-based approach to prevention.
By not mandating that certain
countries reform the punitive policies they have toward certain populations — arresting
women who are found in possession of condoms, or criminalizing homosexuality
for example — much of what we’re trying to do will not be accomplished,
Palen said. “For any of these policies to work there needs to be a change in
the ways those populations are dealt with,” he said.
Palen believed the United States might
be pushed to be more assertive on these issues, and take responsibility for
human rights diplomacy. He thought the predicted absence of President Barack
Obama at the conference was a missed opportunity for the United States to show
leadership and support for AIDS issues.
It’s an agenda that the entire
development community, and not just health professionals, should care about,
agreed the experts. The conference provides a rare opportunity for people to
come together and talk about these larger issues of economics, welfare and
social service delivery. Discussions about creating or refining health systems
that are responsive to the needs of individuals and marginalized groups can
teach other sectors about providing holistic support.
Our collective ability to
address HIV and AIDS also exposes a lot about our systems and
ourselves, Sherard said. HIV is the “great revealer of all of our
opportunities and deficiencies in terms of human rights, equity,
marginalization, (and) our ability and willingness to take care of each other,”
she said.
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