logo
Foreign aid cuts will lead to more HIV infections and deaths, study suggests

Foreign aid cuts will lead to more HIV infections and deaths, study suggests

Independent27-03-2025

HIV infections and deaths will rise as a result of cuts to foreign aid, according to a study.
Researchers said that funding cuts could undo decades of progress.
A new report says that infections and deaths could surge to levels not seen for more than two decades.
Experts, led by academics from Australia, estimate there could be up to 10.8 million additional HIV infections by 2030 in low-and-middle income countries as a result of the cuts.
And there could be up to 2.9 million HIV-related deaths between 2025 and 2030 if funding cuts proposed by the top five donor countries, including the USA and the UK, are not mitigated.
Sir Keir Starmer recently slashed overseas aid spending to fund defence commitments he said were necessary to protect the UK amid uncertainty over the Ukraine war and its implications for European security.
Anneliese Dodds resigned as international development minister over the decision, which will see the budget cut from 0.5% of gross national income to 0.3% in the next two years.
After taking up post in January, US president Donald Trump announced a pause in most US foreign aid spending. He also announced that the US would withdraw from the World Health Organisation.
A paper, published in The Lancet HIV, highlights how international donors have contributed to 40% of all HIV funding in low-and-middle income countries since 2015.
The USA, UK, France, Germany, and the Netherlands together account for more than 90% of international funding, but they have each recently announced plans to implement significant cuts to foreign aid, the article adds.
It is estimated that these plans will lead to a 24% reduction in international HIV funding by 2026.
As a result, the team modelled the human cost of the cuts.
They estimated there could be between 4.4 million to 10.8 million additional HIV infections by 2030 in low-and-middle income countries.
And between 770,000 to 2.9 million HIV-related deaths in children and adults could occur in the same time frame.
'Unmitigated funding reductions could significantly reverse progress in the HIV response by 2030, disproportionately affecting sub-Saharan African countries and key and vulnerable populations,' the authors wrote.
It comes after the UN programme for combating HIV and Aids, UNAids, said that daily new HIV infections around the world could almost double without the aid provided by the United States.
'The United States has historically been the largest contributor to global efforts to treat and prevent HIV, but the current cuts to Pepfar (the US President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief) and USaid-supported programmes have already disrupted access to essential HIV services including for antiretroviral therapy and HIV prevention and testing,' said co-lead study author Dr Debra ten Brink of the Burnet Institute (Australia).
'Looking ahead, if other donor countries reduce funding, decades of progress to treat and prevent HIV could be unravelled.
'It is imperative to secure sustainable financing and avoid a resurgence of the HIV epidemic which could have devastating consequences, not just in regions such as sub-Saharan Africa, but globally.'
And reports suggest that the Trump administration is planning to end funding for Gavi, the vaccine alliance.
Responding to the reports, Professor Sir Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group at the University of Oxford, said: 'The funding cuts in the first three months of this year affecting USaid, ODA, WHO and now Gavi are suffocating global health.'
Commenting on the study, the National Aids Trust said it is 'extremely alarmed' by the potential impact of proposed cuts.
Daniel Fluskey, director of policy, research and influencing at the charity, said: 'These funding cuts will have a devastating impact for millions of people across the world as well as threatening the progress that has been made, both globally and in the UK, on ending the HIV epidemic.
'Like any virus, HIV does not stop at international borders. We will not reach the goal of ending new transmissions by 2030 in the UK with a resurgence of HIV across the world.'
Anne Aslett, chief executive of the Elton John Aids Foundation, added: 'This report demonstrates the critical and urgent need for donors to recognise the cumulative impact of their decisions to cut aid budgets.
'If funding for the global HIV response falls away to the extent this report suggests it could, millions more people will get sick, and health budgets will simply not be able to cope.'
A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson said: 'The UK provides significant funding to the global HIV response, supporting work to end Aids-related deaths and prevent new HIV infections.
'We remain firmly committed to tackling global health challenges, not only because it is the right thing to do, but also because it will help us deliver on our Plan for Change in the UK by supporting global stability and growth.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system
Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system

Ms Medi, of Plaid Cymru, has also signed a cross-party letter calling for an inquiry into the UK's involvement in Israel's military assault in Gaza. At Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday (June 4), Keir Starmer labelled matters in Gaza "appalling and intolerable", and reiterated calls for a ceasefire. Speaking in Parliament on Wednesday, Ms Medi said: 'We can all see that a genocide is happening in Gaza. It is time the Government called this for what it is. 'We are witnessing the systematic dismantling of Gaza's healthcare system, with Israel recently destroying the only kidney dialysis facility in northern Gaza. 'What is the Government doing to prevent Gaza's healthcare system from being decimated further and to re-establish hospitals and lifesaving medical services?' In response to Ms Medi's comments, the minister for the Middle East, Hamish Falconer, said: 'While the blockade remains in place, there is very little that any outside partner can do to try and ensure proper health services in Gaza. 'I will not mislead the house by suggesting otherwise. 'The aid that has come in from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is far too little and far too geographically concentrated to be able to provide the kind of provision that Gazans are entitled to and that they should have, and is a clear necessity under International Humanitarian Law.'

Robert Pether: Australian jailed in Iraq conditionally released
Robert Pether: Australian jailed in Iraq conditionally released

BBC News

time8 hours ago

  • BBC News

Robert Pether: Australian jailed in Iraq conditionally released

An Australian man has been conditionally released from prison in Iraq, after four years of what the UN has called arbitrary Pether, a mechanical engineer, was jailed in 2021 on fraud charges amid a contract dispute between the consulting firm he worked for and the Central Bank of UN has said the 50-year-old's detention and treatment was illegal, and an international court has ruled his employer is not responsible for the business officials are yet to provide an explanation for the decision, Mr Pether's wife Desree told the BBC - noting her "extremely sick" husband is still banned from leaving the country despite needing urgent medical care. The family feels numb with shock, said Mrs Pether, who has been tirelessly lobbying for this moment."It's the first time in over four years that we've taken one step in the right direction.""There's a tiny glimmer of hope, but there's another mountain still to go over.""He really needs to be home and in hospital."Simon Harris, the tánaiste (deputy prime minister) of Ireland - where the Pether family lives - said in a statement to media that Iraq's Foreign Minister had called him to confirm the "welcome news"."[This] has been a long and distressing saga for Robert's wife, three children and his wider family and friends," Harris said."I welcomed this as a first step to his being allowed to return to his family in Roscommon."He added that he remained concerned about Mr Pether's health and any outstanding charges against him - which are BBC has contacted the Australian government for Pether worked in the Middle East for almost a decade before taking on a huge rebuild of the Central Bank of Iraq's Baghdad headquarters in was arrested alongside his CME Consulting colleague, Egyptian Khalid Radwan, after the bank accused the men of stealing money from the being held without charge for almost six months, and then subjected to a speedy trial, the two were each given a five-year jail sentence and a joint fine of $12m (A$18.4m, £8.8m).However, a 2022 report from the UN determined that the case contravened international law, and that Mr Pether and Mr Khalid had been subjected to "abusive and coercive" government has previously denied allegations of ill 2023, the International Chamber of Commerce's (ICC) Court of Arbitration ruled that Iraq's central bank was at fault in the dispute with CME, and ordered it to pay $13m to the Pether said she spoke to her husband after his release on Thursday night."He's on a bit of a high tonight, but I think he'll probably come crashing down tomorrow."He looked sick and weak, she said, noting that he can't keep food down and hasn't eaten properly in months. There are also worries he has a potential skin cancer relapse, she added."He's unrecognisable. If he got on a plane now and they were checking his passport, they would not know it was the same person."She said efforts are now turning to have Mr Pether's travel ban lifted, but in the meantime the family has turned to crowdfunding to try to get him private hospital care in Baghdad."Enough is enough," Mrs Pether said. "He needs to come home."

Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'
Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'

Experts may have moved one step closer to curing HIV for good. Researchers in Australia have developed a new treatment that forces hidden fragments of the virus — normally concealed within human cells — to emerge and expose themselves to the immune system. The breakthrough could enable the body, aided by antiviral drugs, to detect and destroy these lingering viral reservoirs. HIV has remained incurable because the virus can integrate itself into a cell's DNA, lying dormant and undetectable to both medication and immune defenses. But the scientists say they have created a nanoparticle capable of delivering genetic instructions to infected cells, prompting them to produce a signal that reveals the virus's presence. Dr Paula Cevaal, research fellow at the Doherty Institute and co-author of the study, told the Guardian that this feat was 'previously thought impossible'. 'In the field of biomedicine, many things eventually don't make it into the clinic,' she said, 'that is the unfortunate truth; I don't want to paint a prettier picture than what is the reality'. 'But in terms of specifically the field of HIV cure, we have never seen anything close to as good as what we are seeing, in terms of how well we are able to reveal this virus. 'So, from that point of view, we're very hopeful that we are also able to see this type of response in an animal, and that we could eventually do this in humans.' The discovery was first revealed in the journal Nature Communications, with researchers saying they were initially so astonished that they had to re-run the tests. Further research will be needed to determine whether revealing the virus is enough to trigger an immune response, with the tests only being carried out in the lab. And it could still take years before clinical trials for the drug begin, when it would have to go through rigorous testing before reaching consumers. But the advance represents another step forward for the 1.2million Americans currently living with an HIV infection — for which they must take drugs daily. An estimated 31,800 people are infected every year, although this is a 12 percent decline on five years ago. Globally, nearly 40million people have the virus. The nanoparticle is based on mRNA technology, the same that was used in the Covid vaccines made by Pfizer and other vaccine manufacturers. In their paper, the scientists revealed that they could deliver mRNA instructions to cells using the nanoparticle. This mRNA then instructs cells to generate substances that reveal the presence of HIV, but only if the virus is present. The study was done in the lab, and carried out in cells donated by HIV patients. It comes after the Trump administration was reported to have cut funding for research into a potential HIV vaccine. The termination of the $258million research program stunned scientists at Duke University and Scripps Research Institute behind the project. HIV disproportionately affects gay and bisexual individuals in the US, who account for an estimated 67 percent of new infections — according to 2022 data. People who acquire HIV through heterosexual sex made up 22 percent of new diagnoses, or 8,495 cases, while those who were diagnosed after injecting drugs made up seven percent of new diagnoses, or 2,650 cases.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store