UN Report: Why AIDS Rates Are Still High in Parts of the World

More new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths in some parts of the world

Condoms protect against HIV and reduce the risk of contracting other sexually transmitted diseases
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Actually, AIDS should be eradicated by 2030 according to the plans of the United Nations. But inequalities and discrimination prevent achieving this goal, say experts. Women in particular are at risk of becoming infected.
Dhe number of new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths are increasing in some parts of the world. Inequalities are the main reason for the lack of progress, explains the UN program to combat AIDS (UNAIDS) in an analysis for World AIDS Day on December 1st. The main issues are gender-specific inequalities, inequalities among key groups such as homosexuals and inequalities between children and adults.
Given the current trend, the agreed global goals could not be achieved, UNAIDS said. By 2030, the aim was for 95 percent of infected people to know their HIV status. Of these, 95 percent should receive therapy, and 95 percent of those should achieve a drop in viral load below undetectable levels while on antiviral therapy—making transmission of the virus much less likely.
In certain regions where HIV According to the analysis, women are up to 50 percent more likely to become infected with HIV because of violence by intimate partners. In 33 countries worldwide, only 41 percent of all married women aged 15 to 24 were able to make their own decisions about their sexual health between 2015 and 2021.
Infections among women in sub-Saharan Africa accounted for around 63 percent of all new HIV infections worldwide in 2021, it said. Girls and young women aged 15 to 24 were three times more likely to become infected with HIV than boys and young men in this age group.
UNAIDS also warned that children had too little access to life-saving medicines. While more than three-quarters of HIV-infected adults worldwide receive antiretroviral therapy, only just over half of all HIV-infected children are treated accordingly. Consequently, the percentage of AIDS-related deaths in children is comparatively high.
Another hurdle to ending AIDS is discrimination, the UN program said. There is no significant decline in new infections among homosexual men, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. According to UNAIDS, almost 70 countries around the world still criminalize same-sex sexual relations. Sex workers in countries where their work is criminalized are seven times more likely to contract HIV than in countries where sex work is legal or partially legal because of discrimination.
Financial constraints make it difficult to address inequalities, says UNAIDS. Last year, low- and middle-income countries lacked $8 billion (€7.7 billion) for HIV programs. Around 650,000 people died of AIDS that year and around 1.5 million people became infected with HIV.