
UNAIDS 2025 report warns of funding gaps in fight against HIV as India battles stigma, discrimination
The report titled 'AIDS, Crisis And The Power To Transform', released on 10 July, also highlights that the prevalence of intimate partner violence among partnered or married women living with HIV in the same age group in India stood at 24 percent—just 10 percent less than Liberia, where the prevalence was found to be highest globally. The figures are based on data from 2020-2024.
New Delhi: The 2025 Global AIDS Update by UNAIDS (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) shows that 30 percent of people surveyed in the 15-49 age group in India reported facing HIV-related stigma and discrimination.
The 2025 update notes the impact that massive funding cuts by international donors are having on countries most affected by HIV, and how the threat of a funding crisis may hurt global progress in the fight against HIV/AIDS unless countries alter their programming.
According to the UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima, the Global HIV response shows a decline of newly HIV infected persons by 40 percent, and of 56 percent deaths since 2010. However, the withdrawal of the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the biggest contributor to global response, may lead to 6 million additional people being infected, and an additional 4 million deaths by 2029.
The funding crisis has disrupted treatment and prevention programmes around the world, the report says.
But it also points to the emergence of new prevention tools, like Lenacapavir, a long-acting injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), 'which has shown near-complete efficacy in clinical trials'. It can prevent HIV with injection doses twice a year.
The manufacturer of Lenacapavir, Gilead Sciences, has licenced six generic manufacturers, of which Dr Reddy's Laboratories, Emcure, Hetero, and Mylan—subsidiary of Viatris—operate in India. However, affordability and access are still big challenges.
According to the report, in terms of region-wise distribution, Eastern and Southern Africa saw the highest new HIV infections in 2024 at 37 percent, the lowest being in the Caribbean at one percent. In Asia and the Asia Pacific, of which India is a part, the figure stands at 23 percent.
With respect to people living with HIV in 2024, the highest was reported in Eastern and Southern Africa at 52 percent, or 21.1 million. The lowest number of people was in the Caribbean—one percent, or 3,40,000. In Asia and Asia Pacific, the number was 17 percent, or 6.9 million.
India is among the 13 of the 35 reporting countries that have reached safe injecting targets—90 percent using sterile equipment at last injection.
It is clubbed with South Africa, Thailand and Brazil under Low-Dependency Countries in the matrix of dependency on PEPFAR funding.
The report also mentions that social enterprises help diversify revenue resources. In India, the Mist LGBTQ Foundation runs an online platform to market merchandise, and offer HIV self-testing and PrEP consultations, either free or at a low rate. Another organisation, the Network of Maharashtra People Living with HIV TAAL+ Pharmacy sells antiretroviral and other medicines at discounted prices via corporate social responsibility partnerships.
(Edited by Mannat Chugh)
Also Read: Bringing dramatic drop in TB deaths, how TN set an example for rest of India with one-of-a-kind model
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
8 hours ago
- India Today
Kerala reports second Nipah virus case as 57-year-old man dies
A 57-year-old man from Palakkad district in Kerala, who died on July 12, is suspected to have been infected with the Nipah virus, prompting the government to ramp up contact tracing and field-level surveillance in the man had been undergoing treatment at a private hospital in this northern samples were tested at Manjeri Medical College, where the results came back positive for Nipah, Health Minister Veena George said in a She added that the government is awaiting confirmation from the National Institute of Virology in is the second Nipah-related death reported in Kerala in recent days.A native of Malappuram had recently died from the infection, while another patient from Palakkad district remains response to the fresh suspected case, the government has ramped up contact tracing and field-level surveillance in the area.A list of 46 people who came into contact with the patient has been drawn footage and mobile tower location data have been used to help identify those on the contact list.A detailed route map of the patient's recent movements has been prepared, along with a family tree to trace close teams are now carrying out fever surveillance in the region to detect any possible symptoms in others."Field teams have been strengthened, and all available data is being used to monitor the situation," George steps will be taken once confirmation is received from the National Institute of Virology in minister has also instructed officials to step up the response team, considering the seriousness of the have urged people in Palakkad and Malappuram districts to avoid unnecessary visits to hospitals, especially under the current to friends or relatives receiving treatment should be strictly limited, officials said. Only one person is allowed to accompany a patient as a healthcare workers and those coming to the hospital, including patients and their companions, are required to wear masks at all times, an official release the health minister also issued a Nipah alert to hospitals across six advisory has been sent to medical facilities in Palakkad, Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, Wayanad, and Thrissur. Hospitals have been directed to report any patients presenting with fever and symptoms resembling Nipah, including encephalitis and high-grade fever, the minister's office to the WHO, Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease that spreads from animals to humans and can also be transmitted through contaminated food or via direct human-to-human Nipah virus contact list now includes a total of 543 people. Of these, 46 individuals are linked to the newly confirmed case, it said.- EndsMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Kerala

Hindustan Times
8 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Second suspected Nipah death in Kerala; tracing, surveillance stepped up
A 57-year-old man from Palakkad district in Kerala, who died on July 12, is suspected to have been infected with the Nipah virus, prompting the government to ramp up contact tracing and field-level surveillance in the area. According to the WHO, Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease that spreads from animals to humans(Representational Photo/Twitter/islantstudio) The man had been undergoing treatment at a private hospital in this northern district. His samples were tested at Manjeri Medical College, where the result came back positive for Nipah, Health Minister Veena George said in a statement. She added that the government is awaiting confirmation from the National Institute of Virology in Pune. This is the second Nipah-related death reported in Kerala in recent days. A native of Malappuram had recently died from the infection, while another patient from Palakkad district remains hospitalised. Also read: Kerala govt says 499 people in Nipah contact list In response to the fresh suspected case, the government has ramped up contact tracing and field-level surveillance in the area. A list of 46 people who came into contact with the patient has been drawn up. CCTV footage and mobile tower location data have been used to help identify those on the contact list. A detailed route map of the patient's recent movements has been prepared, along with a family tree to trace close contacts. Health teams are now carrying out fever surveillance in the region to detect any possible symptoms in others. "Field teams have been strengthened, and all available data is being used to monitor the situation," George said. Further steps will be taken once confirmation is received from the National Institute of Virology in Pune. The minister has also instructed officials to step up the response team, considering the seriousness of the case. Authorities have urged people in Palakkad and Malappuram districts to avoid unnecessary visits to hospitals, especially under the current circumstances. Visits to friends or relatives receiving treatment should be strictly limited, officials said. Only one person is allowed to accompany a patient as a bystander. Both healthcare workers and those coming to the hospital, including patients and their companions, are required to wear masks at all times, an official release said. According to the WHO, Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease that spreads from animals to humans and can also be transmitted through contaminated food or via direct human-to-human contact. The Nipah virus contact list now includes a total of 543 people. Of these, 46 individuals are linked to the newly confirmed case, it said. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


News18
8 hours ago
- News18
Kerala Issues Nipah Alert In Six Districts After Second Suspected Death In Palakkad
Last Updated: A 57-year-old man from Palakkad district, who died on July 12, is suspected to have been infected with the Nipah virus A second Nipah-related death in Kerala prompted the state government to issue an alert in six districts on Sunday, with measures to ramp up contact tracing and field-level surveillance. A 57-year-old man from Palakkad district, who died on July 12, is suspected to have been infected with the Nipah virus. A native of Malappuram had recently died from the infection. State health minister Veena George said an alert was issued to hospitals in six districts – Palakkad, Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, Wayanad and Thrissur – along with instructions to report cases of fever or encephalitis with Nipah virus symptoms. George said health teams are now carrying out fever surveillance in the region to detect any possible symptoms in others. 'Field teams have been strengthened, and all available data is being used to monitor the situation," George said. She said a contact list has been prepared in the case of the 57-year-old man who died at a private hospital in Palakkad. He tested positive for the Nipah virus, but the state government is awaiting confirmation from the National Institute of Virology (NIV) in Pune, she added. The minister said the man tested positive at Manjeri Medical College. She said a list of 46 people who came into contact with the patient has been drawn up. CCTV footage and mobile tower location data have been used to help identify those on the contact list, she added. An official release said the Nipah virus contact list now includes a total of 543 people. Of these, 46 individuals are linked to the newly confirmed case, it said. Authorities have directed the public to observe the following measures: Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease that spreads from animals to humans and can also be transmitted through contaminated food or via direct human-to-human contact, as per WHO. view comments First Published: July 13, 2025, 23:30 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.