KINGSTON (CMC):
A new report on the global HIV response released on Wednesday shows that during the last two years of the COVID-19 pandemic and other global crises, progress against the HIV pandemic has faltered, resources have shrunk, and millions of lives are at risk.
The report, titled ‘In Danger’, was launched ahead of the International AIDS Conference that will take place in Montreal, Canada.
On average, the AIDS pandemic took a life every minute in 2021. There were 650,000 AIDS-related deaths last year despite the availability of effective HIV treatment and tools to prevent, detect, and treat opportunistic infections.
In the Caribbean, there were an estimated 330, 000 people living with HIV last year. According to the report, from 2010 to 2021, AIDS-related deaths in the region declined by 50 percent.
There were 5,700 deaths last year and new HIV infections decreased by 28 percent since 2010. An estimated 14,000 people contracted HIV in 2021, translating into 270 new HIV infections every week in the Caribbean.
“While the Caribbean has not had the increase in new infections experienced in other regions, the rate of decline is far too slow,” explained Luisa Cabal, UNAIDS director of the Latin America and Caribbean Regional Support Team.
“Thousands of avoidable HIV infections every year are making it ever harder and more expensive to ensure people living with HIV have access to lifesaving treatment and that the targets to end the AIDS pandemic by 2030 are reached,” Cabal added.
The report recommends that countries in the region urgently prioritize combination HIV prevention. This includes behavioral interventions like comprehensive sexuality education, as well as moving to large-scale implementation of prevention projects reaching vulnerable populations at high risk of HIV, so that innovations such as HIV self-testing and pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, become more widely available.
PrEP is a daily medicine taken by an HIV-negative person who is at substantial risk to prevent contracting the virus.
The data show that these prevention strategies are especially important for vulnerable groups like adolescent girls and young women as well as key populations such as gay men and other men who have sex with men, sex workers, transgender people, and people who use drugs.
One-third or 34 percent of new HIV infections last year were among Caribbean young people aged 15-24. There were twice as many infections among young women (23 percent), compared to their male peers (11 percent).
The report notes that during the disruptions of the last few years, key populations in the region have been particularly affected.
As of the end of 2021, an estimated 84 percent of people living with HIV in the Caribbean were aware of their status. Eighty-three percent of all diagnosed people were on treatment. Of these, 87 percent were virally suppressed last year. The target for 2025 is 95 percent for each of these result areas.
At present, the Caribbean is below the global averages for both HIV treatment coverage and viral suppression.
“Even where HIV services are available, intolerance and worry about experiencing injustice can make people fearful to learn their status, make it difficult for them to access treatment and undermine their ability to stay the course. The cost of inaction is too high a price to pay and so leaders in the Caribbean must act now to save lives,” said Richard Amenyah, UNAIDS director for the multi-country office serving Belize, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), Guyana, Jamaica, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago.
The report recommends that Caribbean countries implement policies that remove structural barriers to HIV services and repeal laws and policies that criminalise people living with, and at risk of, HIV.
Finally, deliberate action is required to ensure sufficient and sustainable funding for the Caribbean HIV response.