The pathway to end AIDS in the Caribbean is clear, but it requires political leadership, investment in evidence-informed initiatives to bridge the gaps within and among communities
living with and most affected by HIV and removing discriminatory laws and policies.
The Caribbean region has an estimated 330,000 people living with HIV of which 83 percent know their status and 68 percent are on treatment. However, 57 per cent of people living
with HIV are virally suppressed and thus have a reduced risk of transmitting the virus to their sexual partners. The region therefore still has over 100,000 people still waiting to be put on treatment.
It is important to note that like regions such as sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe and Central Asia, men living with HIV in the Caribbean are still significantly less likely
than women living with HIV to be on treatment. Since 2010, antiretroviral therapy coverage has increased from 19% to 63% among men, and from 21% to 74% among women by the end of 2022. Sadly, while several countries have eliminated mother-to-child transmission
of HIV, children are lagging in treatment across the region as only 39% of the 11,000 children living with HIV are on treatment. In 2022, treatment coverage among males varied across the region ranging from as low as 38 per cent in Suriname to a high of 81 per cent
in The Bahamas whereas among females, treatment ranged from a low of 49 per cent in Belize to a high of 83 per cent in Haiti. Obviously, more work is needed to improve access to treatment among men and children in the region.
The just released 2023 UNAIDS Global AIDS Report
highlights that countries with strong political leadership invest in scaling up evidence-based HIV prevention and treatment; tackle the inequalities holding back progress; engage and enable communities and civil society organisations
in their vital watch-dog role in the response; and make available domestic resources which is sufficient and sustainable. UNAIDS believes these are key components of what is required to end AIDS as a public health threat and thereby advance progress to achieve
the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The progress to end AIDS in the Caribbean needs to be sustained. By the end of 2022, there was 15 per cent reduction in new HIV infections since 2010 (18% among males and 13% among
females). It is worth noting, however, that there was an observed nominal increase in new HIV infections in the Caribbean from 14,000 in 2021 to 16,000 in 2022. AIDS deaths declined by 53 per cent between 2010 and 2022. These epidemiological shifts vary across
different countries in the region and continuous efforts are needed to sustain downwards the incidence and mortality trends.
Commendably, many countries in the region are integrating communicable and non-communicable diseases to deliver HIV services at the primary health care level. All these pathways show that
Caribbean countries have a clear path to sustainably end AIDS in the region. Jamaica, for example, is piloting social contracting and public-private initiatives as part of a multi-sectoral HIV response involving civil society organizations and the private
health sector to deliver high-quality HIV-related services.
The catastrophic effect of the COVID-19 pandemic, the debt crisis and the ongoing climate crisis have further weakened socioeconomic development and resilience in the Caribbean sub-region.
Even though most of the Caribbean countries are classified as middle- or upper-middle-income countries, they are highly indebted due to lack of access to concessional loans which help make it difficult to fully invest in health to achieve universal health
coverage from domestic resources. Notwithstanding the difficulties, Caribbean Governments should be applauded for their full commitment and support for the 2021 Political Declaration on AIDS to end the HIV epidemic as a public health threat by 2030. To ensure
long-term sustainability, most Governments across the region fully cover the HIV treatment programmes in their countries. Some countries, however, receive international funding from The Global Fund and The President Emergency Response for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)
to scale up their HIV responses.
Ending AIDS is a political and economic choice, and most Governments in the Caribbean are making the effort to put the health and well-being of their people first. That is why we are seeing
declines in new infections and AIDS mortalities. However, there should be no room for complacency as stigma and discrimination towards people living with HIV and key populations is still rampant in our schools, workplace, health facilities, communities and
even within the judiciary and law enforcement agencies. These negative attitudes and behaviours have the potential of pushing people further underground with a consequence of uncontrolled spread of HIV, and late presentation with advanced HIV disease and premature
deaths.
No one should die of AIDS-related illnesses in this era because treatment works, it saves lives. So many people should not be uninitiated in care. Governments must ask themselves what the
sociocultural and policy and legislative barriers are that keep men and children across the region away from HIV prevention and treatment services.
Caribbean Governments should continue to put their people and communities first and keep investing in HIV and health programmes to increase life expectancy, build and protect
their human capital for turbo-charging the Sustainable Development Goals. There will be obstacles, but with political leadership and investment in the AIDS response to sustain and scale up what works and removing harmful laws and policies, and through partnership
and global solidarity, the Caribbean will be on the right path to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.
Dr Richard Amenyah is a medical doctor from Ghana and public health specialist. He is the director for the UNAIDS multi-country office in the Caribbean. You can reach him on Twitter
at @RichardAmenyah or @UNAIDSCaribbean and jamaica@unaids.org