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With US aid slashed, Nigerian HIV volunteers went door‑to‑door to keep patients alive

Volunteers in Benue helped over 1,000 patients resume antiretroviral therapy after a U.S. aid freeze disrupted HIV drug supplies in 2025, preventing treatment collapse.

  • On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump paused foreign aid, causing supply shortages that forced volunteer Josephine Angev to launch door-to-door efforts reconnecting HIV patients in Nigeria's Benue State with life-saving treatment.
  • Before the freeze, the U.S. funded around 90% of Nigeria's HIV treatment costs, leaving the nation vulnerable. All 10 treatment centers in Makurdi closed for a month, halting access to antiretrovirals for thousands.
  • Coordinated by Dinah Adaga, volunteers in Benue State traced patients by visiting homes when phones failed, bringing more than 1,000 people back into care between June and December 2025, including 95 children under five.
  • A health agreement signed in December commits the U.S. to $2.1 billion and Nigeria to $3 billion for HIV response, prioritizing the transition of full funding to Nigeria over the next five years.
  • Prevention services suffered longer disruptions, global health agencies warn, while the new agreement places emphasis on Christian faith-based healthcare providers to support Nigeria's Christian population amid Islamist violence.
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Reuters broke the news in United Kingdom on Tuesday, March 31, 2026.
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