Global perspective Human stories

‘Tear down inequalities’ to end COVID pandemic: UNAIDS

HIV-positive parents attend a support session at a clinic in Kamuli District, Uganda.
© UNICEF/Jimmy Adriko
HIV-positive parents attend a support session at a clinic in Kamuli District, Uganda.

‘Tear down inequalities’ to end COVID pandemic: UNAIDS

Health

A new report issued on Wednesday by the UN agency leading the fight against HIV/AIDS shows that people living with the human immunodeficiency virus face the double jeopardy of HIV and COVID-19 – as widening inequalities continue to prevent them from accessing services. 

According to the UNAIDS Global AIDS Update 2021, people living with HIV are at a higher risk of severe COVID-19 illness and death, yet the vast majority are denied access to life-saving vaccines.  

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Although key populations and their sexual partners account for 65 per cent of new HIV infections, they are largely left out of both HIV and COVID-19 responses, including 800,000 children living with HIV. 

“We are 40 years into the fight against HIV. Both the successes and the failures have taught us that we cannot prepare for or defeat a pandemic unless we tear down inequalities, promote people-centred, rights-based approaches and work together with communities to reach everyone in need”, said UNAIDS chief Winnie Byanyima. 

Startling statistics 

Studies from England and South Africa have found that the risk of dying from COVID-19 among people living with HIV is double that of the general population.  

In sub-Saharan Africa, home to 67 per cent people living with HIV, less than three per cent have received even one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine to date.  

At the same time, HIV prevention and treatment services are eluding key populations, as well as children and adolescents. 

“We have failed to learn the lessons of HIV, when millions were denied life-saving medicines and died because of inequalities in access”, said Ms. Byanyima.  

Global South ‘in crisis’ 

As rich countries and corporations hold on tightly to the lucrative monopoly of producing and delivering COVID-19 supplies, millions of lives in the developing world are in the balance, due to lack of access. 

This is severely impacting the world as health systems in developing countries become overwhelmed, such as in Uganda, where football stadiums are being turned into makeshift hospitals. 

“Rich countries in Europe are preparing to enjoy the summer as their populations have easy access to COVID-19 vaccines, while the global South is in crisis”, said Ms. Byamyima. 

Key populations 

The new UNAIDS report illustrates how COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions have badly disrupted HIV testing, with many countries showing steep drops in HIV diagnoses, referrals to care services and HIV treatment initiations. 

Some 1.5 million new HIV infections recorded last year were predominantly among transgender women, sex workers, gay men, intravenous drug users and their sexual partners – key populations that account for 65 per cent of the world’s infections.  

These populations also accounted for 93 per cent of new HIV infections outside sub-Saharan Africa, and 35 percent within.  

However, in most countries they remain marginalized and largely unable to access HIV services. 

Billionaires are sailing their yachts in the same Mediterranean waters that migrants are drowning in – UNAIDS chief 

Children more vulnerable 

While HIV testing and treatment have been scaled up massively over the past 20 years, service gaps remain much larger for children than for adults, according to the report.  

Last year, treatment coverage was 74 per cent for adults but just 54 per cent for children – leaving some 800,000 in the lurch.  

Moreover, many children were not tested for HIV at birth and remain unaware of their HIV status, making it difficult to find and care for them.  

“This is totally unacceptable”, said the top UNAIDS official. 

Poor at back of line 

Poverty and lack of schooling are also formidable barriers to health and HIV services.  

The report shows how family planning services for women and voluntary medical male circumcision for men and boys, are much less likely to be accessed by people living in poverty. 

They are also a driver of migration, which severely impacts access to HIV services and puts lives in danger as migrants flee conflict and poverty in search of safety and economic security. 

“Billionaires are sailing their yachts in the same Mediterranean waters that migrants are drowning in”, said the UNAIDS chief. “How can we stand by and let this be the “new normal”. 

UNICEF is helping raise awarness of HIV and AIDS in Myanmar.
© UNICEF/Zar Mon
UNICEF is helping raise awarness of HIV and AIDS in Myanmar.