U.S. funding halted Africa's HIV crisis. Trump's cuts have forced a reckoning.
SIDVOKODVO, Eswatini — When American taxpayer money started flowing here 18 years ago, this country was the epicenter of the global HIV/AIDS crisis, with the world's highest prevalence rate, and so much death that 1 in 10 households was headed by a child.
U.S. aid unleashed a flood of lifesaving antiretroviral pediatric drugs. It funded doctors and data systems. It helped build an ultramodern medical facility in the center of the country, known as the Miracle Campus, that provided free care behind an entrance sign saying: 'From the American people.'
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