Close Menu
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Living
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
  • Web Stories
What's On

Township residents are in for a fun Durban July weekend

July 3, 2026

An AIDS-free generation is within reach, but not guaranteed | HIV/AIDS

July 3, 2026

Comedian and men’s awareness event

July 3, 2026

Expensive tickets make Bokke’s supporters frown

July 3, 2026

10 Thai monks dead after 11-year-old plowed into them

July 3, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Times Network
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Living
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
  • Web Stories
Home » An AIDS-free generation is within reach, but not guaranteed | HIV/AIDS
Local News

An AIDS-free generation is within reach, but not guaranteed | HIV/AIDS

By staffJuly 3, 20265 Mins Read
An AIDS-free generation is within reach, but not guaranteed | HIV/AIDS
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

For more than four decades, the global AIDS response has been powered by grief, rage, courage and determination. Families buried loved ones long before their time. Communities confronted discrimination and built networks of care when the silence was deafening. Scientific breakthroughs and community-driven innovation transformed HIV from a near-certain death sentence into a chronic, manageable condition. The result is one of the greatest public health achievements of the past half century. That success is now under threat.

Then came the shock.

In 2025, abrupt funding cuts disrupted the systems that made this progress possible, especially in high-burden countries reliant on sustained investment in HIV programmes across Africa and parts of Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe.

Prevention efforts stalled. Clinics faced stockouts of essential medicines. Health workers were laid off. Systems built over decades began to unravel in months.

At the United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS, leaders warned the world faces a “perilous moment”, with the global HIV response losing ground.

Behind the headlines and rhetoric are widening inequalities. In West and Central Africa, treatment coverage for pregnant women is too low. In Eastern Europe and Central Asia, one of the few regions where infections are rising, any disruption risks accelerating the epidemic further. In Latin America and the Caribbean, persistent inequalities continue to leave marginalised communities, including young people, without consistent access to prevention and care. Across all regions, children risk becoming even more invisible.

Even before these disruptions, the world was falling short. Today, more than 2.4 million children and adolescents are living with HIV, yet only about 55 percent are receiving life-saving treatment – far behind adults. Every day, around 200 children still die from AIDS-related causes. These are not isolated failures. They are a global failure to reach those most at risk.

Deadly consequences

A stark Cost of Inaction analysis from UNICEF and UNAIDS shows where this path leads. If HIV prevention and treatment coverage is reduced by half, the world could see up to three million children newly infected with HIV by 2040, and 1.8 million children die from AIDS-related causes. These outcomes are not inevitable. They are the result of choices being made now.

But it was never data alone that moved the world to act on HIV. It was people. Mothers who demanded protection for their children. Young people who challenged stigma and silence. Communities that built systems of care where none existed. Their voices forced governments and the UN to listen, fund and provide services, and they must do so again.

We know what works.

We have the tools, the science and the experience. Expanding proven interventions could prevent more than half a million deaths.

New breakthroughs like lenacapavir, a long-acting prevention option, can protect adolescent girls and young women with just two injections a year, helping overcome barriers of access, stigma and adherence. It can also be used safely by pregnant and breastfeeding women, protecting both mothers and their babies. Expanding access to these innovations globally could transform the trajectory of the epidemic.

Community-led solutions remain central. In South Africa and Zimbabwe, mentor mother programmes are helping women stay on treatment and ensuring children are tested and cared for. In Tanzania, treatment advocates and community health workers have gone door-to-door to identify children living with HIV who had been missed. The lesson is clear: progress happens when services reach people where they are.

Success also depends on how services are delivered and on government leadership. Oman became the first country in the Middle East to eliminate vertical transmission of HIV. They achieved this milestone by using data, providing routine testing and screening for all pregnant women, timely treatment and support, despite challenges such as stigma and COVID‑19 disruptions.

What works is combining policy reform with consistent quality improvements, an approach Kazakhstan is advancing through HIV prevention, treatment and care standards, and a comprehensive HIV action plan. And in Ecuador, the government is integrating HIV services into routine services for all pregnant women, prioritising the path to eliminating vertical transmission of HIV.

Political declarations must be judged by one measure alone: lives saved.

The test is simple. Will children be protected from HIV? Will mothers receive the care they need? Will adolescent girls, whether in Kenya, Jamaica or Fiji, be able to grow up free from the shadow of HIV?

We have come closer than ever before to ending AIDS in children. But progress is not guaranteed. It depends on political will, sustained investment and global solidarity.

If the world allows funding gaps to widen and systems to weaken, the consequences will not be contained to one region; they will be felt globally.

If, instead, we act now on this new political declaration, we can protect a generation, and finally finish what the world began. In the end, our commitments must be judged by one measure alone: lives saved.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Khamenei’s coffin readied as Iran prepares for seven-day funeral | Obituaries News

Could water become a flashpoint between Islamabad and New Delhi? | News

Man City sign Elliot Anderson from Forest in record British transfer | Football News

More than 900 arrested during South Africa’s antimigrant protests | Migration News

Belgium stage 3–2 comeback win over Senegal to enter World Cup last 16 | World Cup 2026 News

The Iran talks expose the collapse of US diplomacy | Opinions

In Pictures: Mexico celebrates historic World Cup victory | World Cup 2026 News

USA face Bosnia in World Cup knockouts, with pride, credentials on the line | World Cup 2026

Five humanitarian workers killed in convoy ambush in South Sudan | Conflict News

Editors Picks

An AIDS-free generation is within reach, but not guaranteed | HIV/AIDS

July 3, 2026

Comedian and men’s awareness event

July 3, 2026

Expensive tickets make Bokke’s supporters frown

July 3, 2026

10 Thai monks dead after 11-year-old plowed into them

July 3, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest south africa news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

The highest level of national Kyokushin in Skhaleni is considered

July 3, 2026

‘Ridiculous’ that US maintains support for NATO – Trump

July 3, 2026

Khamenei’s coffin readied as Iran prepares for seven-day funeral | Obituaries News

July 3, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Instagram
© 2026 Times Network. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Accessibility

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.