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Review of HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean: Implementing Agreed Goals and Commitments

This report provides an overview of the HIV epidemic in Latin America and the Caribbean, analyzing overall figures, prevalence rates, and challenges in implementing agreed goals and commitments. It highlights the need for improved data, stronger national leadership, and strategic investments to address the HIV epidemic effectively.

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Review of HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean: Implementing Agreed Goals and Commitments

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  1. 2009 ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL ANNUAL MINISTERIAL REVIEW HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean Implementing agreed goals and commitments César Antonio Núñez - UNAIDS Montego Bay, Jamaica, 5-6 June 2009

  2. Halfway between UNGASS (2001) and the Millennium Development Goals (2015)HIV in Latin America and The Caribbean

  3. Overall figures – LA • HIV epidemic in Latin America remains stable overall, but continues growing in vulnerable groups. • In 2007, new infections were estimated at 140 000 [88 000–190 000] • Estimated number of PLWHIV is 1.7 millones • Of total PLWHIV, 44,000 are under 15 años • Approximately 63,000 individuals died of AIDS in 2007.

  4. Overall figures – Caribbean • HIV Prevalence remains high among Men who have Sex with Men, Male Sex Workers, Female Sex Workers, Crack Cocaine Users, Prisoners, and Young People • In 2007, 20, 000 New HIV Infections occurred • Total of 230,00 people living with HIV from 210,000 in 2001 • Adult HIV prevalence at 1.1% and increasingly affecting females • 14,000 people died of AIDS: leading cause of death in the 25-44 years-old

  5. HIV prevalence in Latin American & Caribbean adults, 1990−2007

  6. 3.0 2.8 North Africa and the Middle East Millions 2.6 2.4 Eastern Europe and Central Asia 2.2 2.0 1.8 East, South and South-East Asia 1.6 1.4 1.2 Latin America and the Caribbean 1.0 0.8 0.6 Sub-Saharan Africa 0.4 0.2 0.0 end- 2002 end- 2003 end- 2004 end- 2005 end- 2006 end- 2007 Year Number of people receiving antiretroviral drugs in low- and middle income countries, 2002−2007

  7. Estimated # of individuals receiving ART, 2007 Universal Access Report 2007 WHO June 2008.

  8. Number of HIV-infected children under 15 receiving antiretroviral treatment (2005–2006) There was a 56% increase in the number of children receiving ARVs in LAC

  9. 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Monitoring the Epidemic: Resource Tracking Annual expenditures on HIV/AIDS in Latin America by source, 2001-2006 Domestic Public Expenditures Total International (Excluding GF) Million US$ The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria División de Financiación y Economía del SIDA, ONUSIDA, 2008

  10. 250 200 150 100 50 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Monitoring the Epidemic: Resource TrackingAnnual expenditures on HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean by source, 2001-2006 Domestic Public Expenditures The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Million US$ Total International (Excluding GF) División de Financiación y Economía del SIDA, ONUSIDA, 2008

  11. The Three Ones Principles Are we monitoring? ONE HIV/AIDS Action Framework UNIVERSAL ACCESS ONE National AIDS Coordinating Authority ONE M&E System

  12. Gaps and challenges in the response to HIV

  13. Under-addressed issues • Quality and availability of relevant data • Reporting against the UNGASS and Universal Access, although improved, is not without notable gaps. • HIV, social vulnerability and risk-taking behaviours: • Women and HIV • Men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders • Sex workers (SW) • Injecting drug users:

  14. ‘Scratching the surface’ of integrated development programming • While the interconnectedness among MDGs is clear, it is not always evident that the correlation of development issues finds its way into cohesive, multisectoral development programming and measurement. • Failure to routinely integrate strategies and services to address undeniably interconnected issues represents a lost opportunity.

  15. Care, Treatment and Support • Further integration into primary health care services • Further integration of community care/support services • Geographic decentralization of treatment sites • Equity in treatment access • Close Gaps in coverage • Mind treatment costs

  16. Stigma and Discrimination “ ... In most countries, discrimination remains legal against women, men who have sex with men, sex workers, drug users and ethnic minorities. This must change. ... [I]n countries with legal protection and protection of human rights for these people ..., there are fewer deaths. Not only is it unethical not to protect these groups: it makes no sense from a public health perspective. It hurts us all.” Ban Ki-moon UN Secretary General – August 2008

  17. Institutional Response • Monitoring and evaluation • Availability of resources • Integrated Public Health Delivery Systems

  18. The Way Forward:Meeting the Internationally Agreed Development Goals (IADGs)

  19. Maintaining interest in HIV • Continue to provide community, national and regional leadership and to keep HIV on national and regional agenda • Maintain and/or increase, as far as possible, current national investments in HIV (with a focus on integrated development approaches). • Stronger and more visible national leadership on difficult challenges such as stigma

  20. Maintaining strategic investment in HIV • Improved data • Right allocation of current and future investments: • Strengthening of Health Systems • Human rights and social justice programming • Strengthening programs to address social vulnerability and risk: • Gender inequity • Most-at-risk populations • Prevention: increasing coverage and comprehensiveness. • Improving and enhancing collaborative responses for HIV/TB co-infection

  21. Scaling up HIV Prevention • For each new person put on ART, two new persons become HIV+ • Combination HIV prevention programmes must be widely implemented at country and regional levels • Biomedical interventions (ABC, Circumcision, STI prevention...) • Education programmes, including sexuality education in youth • Enabling environment interventions based on human rights • Legislations to stop all forms of criminalization related to HIV • Creating a movement of social change • Expanding access to treatment as a contribution to prevention

  22. Take-home messages • Significant progress – but is it enough? • Prevention is lagging behind and needs strengthening • Increasing progress on civil society involvement • Stigma and discrimination remain huge challenges • Sustainability of funding • Lack of strategic information • Strengthen political will

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