So what's stopping us from ending AIDS?
What if the AIDS epidemic could be ended by 2030? Watch this video to learn more.
What if the AIDS epidemic could be ended by 2030? Watch this video to learn more.
US$ 29 billion a year by 2025 will provide for comprehensive HIV services, people-centred, context-specific service integration and the removal of societal and legal impediments to creating an enabling environment for HIV services. Investing fully will lead to preventing hundreds of thousands of...
This graphic discusses the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the HIV response
This infographic discusses how girls and women make up more than half of the 37.7 million people living with HIV. Ending AIDS by 2030 requires that we address girls’ and women’s diverse roles by putting them at the centre of the response.
This infographic discusses how TB is the leading cause of death among people living with HIV.
The Deep South region (AL, FL, GA, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, TX) has been particularly affected by HIV, having the highest diagnosis and death rates of any region in the US.1,2 This region has historically had high pov- erty rates, high levels of STIs and other diseases, and a cultural climate that...
This new Road Map charts a way forward for country-level actions to achieve an ambitious set of HIV prevention targets by 2025. Those targets emerged from the 2021 Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS, which the United Nations General Assembly adopted in June 2021 and they are underpinned by the...
The United Nations Career Journey Podcast interviews individuals working for the United Nations all around the world. Conversations explore their fascinating career paths, what career satisfaction means to them, and how they keep learning and developing on the job. This episode interviews Irene...
This research discusses how PrEP was approved for HIV prevention in the US in 2012; uptake has been slow. Black and Hispanic people have higher rates of new HIV diagnoses than White non-Hispanic people in the US. We describe the inequitable use of PrEP by race within US regions from 2012-2021.