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| Campaigns | Making a Mistake on Treatment – PEPFAR’s New Five-Year AIDS Strategy |
| The US Global AIDS Plan | Health GAP Policy Analysis: Making a Mistake on Treatment – PEPFAR’s New Five-Year AIDS Strategy by Brook K. Baker, Feb. 5, 2010
Full analysis below, or click here to download as a PDF.
Programming for HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care is leveling off as PEPFAR is flat-funded in the U.S. and as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria begins to ration resources as its coffers go to half empty. At the same time that people living with HIV/AIDS are celebrating recent WHO and UNAIDS reports estimating that there were 4 million people on treatment at the end of 2008, a ten-fold increase in just six years, health care workers in Africa are being told that they can no longer continue to start people on antiretroviral therapy – in essence, that treatment is capped at the current figure.
These promises are coming due – 2010 has arrived – but the myriad promises of adequate funding and comprehensive programming have not been met. Admittedly treatment now reaches over 4 million people, but 10 million additional patients who need treatment under new WHO treatment guidelines are still without medicines. So, in reality, the world is only 30% of the way towards Universal Access with respect to treatment and likewise has achieved only partial success in prevention, reducing new infections by comparable 30% over the past 12 years. Rather than fully funding the Global Fund so that it can meet growing, country-led demand for AIDS programming and health system strengthening, donors have underfunded the Fund over the past two year resulting in rationing of resources for technically sound plans. There were 10% reductions in the first two years, and 25% in the last three years, of approved Round 8 grants. There were even deeper reductions in Round 9 grants; for 2010, the Global Fund has been forced to discontinue rolling continuation grants and Round 10 and other funding streams are at risk as there is a 50% shortfall of needed resources. By undermining the Global Fund, donors are signaling that recipients must scale-back their ambitions and resist investing in activities with recurrent costs, such as hiring desperately needed health workers or enrolling new patients on treatment. However, by flat-funding PEPFAR and the Global Fund and touting sustainability and a take-over of fiscal responsibility by its “partners,” the Five-Year Strategy is subtly reneging on the U.S.’s promise of long-term financial assistance to countries that simply cannot shoulder the financial burden of comprehensive AIDS programmes on their own. In doing so, Obama administration not only risks undermining treatment scale-up that it has promised, it also threatens PEPFAR’s future success and the survival of existing programs. Flat-funding AIDS means twice as many die When treatment is started with improved, first-line therapies that are more durable, tolerable, and efficacious and when that treatment is started when the immune system is still robust, people can live a nearly normal life span. The converse is also true – when treatment is delayed, people die prematurely, many in the first year of treatment; and when treatment is denied, people will certainly die. The people who are dying of AIDS today, are the people who became infected eight to ten years ago and have not received treatment. As shown in the chart below, the number of new HIV infections peaked in 1995 when 3.5 million people became infected. There has been a gradual and steady decline of about 70,000 cases a year over the last 12 years so that in 2008 there were approximately 2.7 million new infections. Correspondingly, the annual number of deaths peaked in 2004 – roughly nine years after the peak in incidence and just as AIDS treatment started to accelerate.
Scaling up to Universal Access, defined as 80% of people eligible for treatment receiving it, by 2015 would certainly require expanded investments in increasing the number of health workers and strengthening health systems. Simultaneously, it would require increasing the number of new people on treatment from 1 million per year to 3 million per year over the next five years and then leveling off to something closer to 2 million a year thereafter. Under the Universal Access scenario, deaths would quickly fall from over 2 million a year to under 1 million a year. The Five-Year Strategy pales in comparison. Admittedly, the Strategy does commit the U.S. to expand its treatment target from the current number of patients supported on antiretroviral therapy as of September 30, 2009, 2.4 million, to at least 4 million by the end of 2013. However, this 1.6 million total translates into an extremely modest goal of adding only 400,000 patients on treatment during each of the next four years. (Note: even this modest number includes nearly a 1/3 overlap with Global Fund treatment figures and also significant overlaps with treatment efforts by partner countries. ) Accordingly, it is highly likely that the Five-Year Strategy’s treatment goal, when combined with other slowing global efforts, will only succeed in maintaining the current global pace of roughly 1 million new treatments each year achieving only half the treatment coverage attained under a Universal Access by 2015 scenario.
If the current treatment goal of only 4 million by 2013 is maintained and continued at the same pace thereafter, the AIDS death rate under the Obama Five-Year strategy will remain at nearly 2 million a year falling only slightly because of the slight decline in new infections over the past decade. This contrasts with only 1 million deaths per year under Universal Access. Accordingly, six years from now, there would be roughly twice as many deaths under the Obama Strategy as under the Universal Access scenario.
Treatment has been the reward for people getting tested. The incentive to know one’s status greatly increases when a person will receive something other than knowledge of a death sentence. The provision of testing and associated counseling has been shown to strengthened prevention. There is evidence in both rich and poor countries that people who know their status engage in safer sex than those who don’t.
To the contrary, treating AIDS has been shown on multiple occasions to be cost effective even under the parsimonious metric used by mainstream health economists. It’s not the cheapest investment in health, but it preserves the life of young adults, an absolutely critical demographic in any society. This is the age group that is most economically productive. It is the age group that ordinarily raises children and cares for elders. Remove it from Africa and you leave hollowed families and communities in the wake. Creating competition between maternal and child health, sexual and reproductive health, and AIDS is particularly disingenuous considering how closely linked they all truly are. AIDS is the number 1 killer of women of child-bearing age worldwide and a leading killer of children in Africa. AIDS activists, along with other SHR activists, have been at the forefront of promoting sexual and reproductive health and addressing the gender dynamics of the pandemic. They have demanded treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, have advocated for access to reproductive technologies, and have promoted circumcision as a viable prevention measure. AIDS activists are not against funding for deworming children, for reconstitutive fluids, or for inoculations. These simple and cost effective interventions are not undermined or countermanded by AIDS; they are neglected because of donor stinginess and inadequate investments in health by countries themselves. Engaging in magical thinking about resources and wishing people well will not stop the crash of immune systems in untreated patients. Untreated, our brothers and sisters will die, often in the prime of life, leaving vulnerable children, grieving parents, and depopulated communities behind. The demand of AIDS activists is clear – if there is enough money for war and enough for bailing out bankers, there’s more than enough to save the 11 million lives that will otherwise be lost if the flat-funding continues and if PEPFAR’s treatment goals are kept artificially low at 4 million. If instead, the U.S. signals its ongoing commitment to treat its fair share, 6 million by the end of 2013 and more millions thereafter, it will provide leadership for other countries to follow. If FY-2011 appropriations reach $7.25 billion instead of zero growth, the U.S. would be on track to reach that target. If it increases its financial commitment to its new Global Health Initiative from $63 to $95 billion over six years, as recommended by many health advocates, it can help achieve all of the health-related Millennium Development Goals. With these modest and pragmatic changes, the delayed goal of Universal Access to comprehensive HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care will be reached. 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