A joint Word Bank/UNAIDS report looks at the potential impact of the global financial crisis on HIV prevention and treatment programmes worldwide. Using data collected in March 2009 from 71 countries, the analysis looks at how the crisis could affect the nearly 4 million people living with HIV on treatment, and the 7 million who need treatment but don't have access to it, and proposes some appropriate responses. The potential effects on prevention activities were also investigated. The report suggests that the well-being of millions of people could be put at risk.
The report notes that an important lesson learned during previous crises is that cuts in core social development spending have long-term negative effects. Responding to fiscal pressures by reducing spending on HIV will reverse recent gains and require high-cost offsetting measures over the longer term
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| economic crisis&hiv prevention_july_09.pdf | 1.1 MB |