Trump-era global funding cuts devastate HIV prevention programmes, UNAIDS says
UNAIDS reports US funding cuts since January 2025 disrupted HIV prevention in dozens of countries, risking 3.3 million more infections by 2030, with clinics closed and access to medicines declining.
- UNAIDS warned that global HIV funding cuts during the Trump era resulted in widespread disruptions to life-saving testing, treatment, and prevention services.
- The executive director said the funding crisis exposed the fragility of progress against HIV/AIDS and could lead to 3.3 million additional new infections by 2030 if left unaddressed.
- Despite a 40% reduction in new HIV cases since 2010, the disease remains over three times higher than needed to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030, according to UNAIDS.
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45 Articles
Trump-era global funding cuts devastate HIV prevention programmes, UNAIDS says
An uncounted number of extra people have died from AIDS and 2.5 million have lost access to medicine to block the spread of HIV, because of cuts to global programmes since Donald Trump returned to the White House, the U.N. body fighting AIDS said on Tuesday.
‘Profound effect on millions’ after Donald Trump cuts to HIV screening
An uncounted number of extra people have died from Aids and 2.5 million have lost access to medicine to block the spread of HIV, because of cuts to global programmes since Donald Trump returned to the White House, the UN body fighting Aids said yesterday.
For Aids, declining funding threatens prevention and access to treatment, compromising the goal of ending HIV by 2030.
In front of the press in Geneva on Tuesday, 25 November, the Executive Director of ONUSIDA expressed concern about the collapse of HIV prevention services, after a year of cuts in international funding.
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