MSF, Doctors Without Borders, HIV prevention drug

Confronting a deadly pandemic

According to the World Health Organization, there are 35 million people living with HIV/AIDS worldwide, the majority of them in sub-Saharan Africa.

Although HIV/AIDS is regarded as a manageable chronic disease in developed countries, the situation in developing countries is very different. Nearly 500 children are newly infected with HIV every day. Without treatment, half of all infants with HIV will die before their second birthday.

While there is no cure, a combination of drugs known as antiretrovirals (ARVs) enables people to live longer, healthier lives if taken regularly. The cost of first-line drugs is now cheaper than ever, but efforts are still needed to ensure everyone who is living with HIV receives treatment.

Globally, 28.7 million people living with HIV were receiving ARVs in 2021. This equates to a global ARV coverage rate of 75 percent. However, only 52 percent of children were receiving ARV treatment at the end of 2021. (All figures: UNAIDS)

Putting HIV/AIDS in context

Since the beginning of the epidemic, HIV/AIDS has killed an estimated 42.3 million people around the world, with an estimated 630,000 deaths in 2023 alone. When left untreated, HIV gradually weakens the body’s immune system, usually over a period of up to 10 years after infection.

Quick facts about HIV/AIDS

A doctor hands over a pill bottle for medication for HIV/Aids.
From the frontlines

Preventing HIV transmission at birth: The success of a programme in the DRC

Mother-to-child transmission of HIV remains the most significant source of infection among children under 15 years of age. However, nearly all of these transmissions are preventable. In Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams have established a dedicated healthcare programme to prevent these infections.

Read more

Prevention

HIV testing plays an important role in prevention programmes, by identifying those who need treatment, thus reducing the risk of infection to others. In many places, the fear and stigma still associated with HIV and limited access to testing means many are still reluctant to test. We have piloted HIV self-testing in different settings, by offering people take-home kits to test for HIV, along with advice on what to do should their test come back positive. 

One preventive measure is pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), which means people who are at high risk of HIV infection receive and take ARVs to keep the virus at bay. For example, in Eswatini, we offer PrEP to people whose partner or spouse is HIV-positive.

PMTCT involves giving ARV treatment to the mother during and after pregnancy, labour and breastfeeding, and to the infant just after birth. In South Africa, mother-to-child transmission remains relatively high at 4.3 per cent when a baby reaches 18 months of age.

In response, MSF developed Post Natal Clubs, which bring HIV-positive mothers and their babies together for regular health sessions for the baby’s first 1,000 days. This ensures mothers stay successfully on treatment, reducing the risk of transmitting HIV to their children during breastfeeding.

How MSF responds to HIV/Aids

MSF HIV/Aids programmes offer HIV testing with pre- and post-test counselling, treatment, and prevention of opportunistic infections, prevention of mother-to-child transmission, and provision of ARVs for people in the late stages of the disease.

Our programmes also generally include support to prevention, education, and awareness activities to help people understand how to prevent the spread of the virus.

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, HIV care in Myanmaar
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MSF's HIV/Aids programmes cover all stages of the HIV journey, right from the beginning (HIV testing) to provision of ARVs for people in the late stages of the disease. Our programmes also include counselling, treatment, prevention of opportunistic infections and mother-to-child transmission. Another major part of our HIV/Aids outreach is communication, to help people understand how to prevent the spread of the virus. The support from donors like you means that MSF can help and educate more people about this virus.

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