Falling levels of donor government funding for HIV programmes threaten progress towards the 2020 global target of 90-90-90, according to research presented on Wednesday at the 22nd International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2018).
The 90-90-90 targets endorsed by governments in 2014 call for 90% of people to know their HIV status, 90% of people with diagnosed HIV infection to be on treatment, and 90% of people on treatment to be virally suppressed.
At a press conference, Jennifer Kates of the Kaiser Family Foundation presented data from their recent joint report with UNAIDS alongside three further studies showing that overall funding by donor governments has largely stalled, with 8 out of 14 governments reducing their global spend on HIV efforts in 2017. A rise in overall funding from 2016-17 was due to changed timings in US spending and not expected to be replicated in future.
“We are in a different age of financing,” she concluded, “There is no significant new funding”.
A study from the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health showed that of the $48 billion spent by 188 countries on HIV in 2015, overall about 62% came from domestic spending by governments and about 30% came from development assistance. However, in countries with high HIV prevalence nearly 80% of funding came from development assistance, making these countries vulnerable to any reductions in aid.
Deepak Mattur of UNAIDS presented a paper analysing data from 112 low- and middle-income countries which found that, overall, domestic public spending on HIV in these countries increased by 60% from 2006 to 2016. While almost all regions increased their domestic HIV resources, the lowest increase (33%) was in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The study concluded that sustained increases in domestic public spending will be critical for ending AIDS as a global public health threat by 2030.
“We are already almost 20% short of the funding needed to reach the 2020 targets,” he said.
John Stover of Avenir Health, however, presented a paper contending that more focused allocation of resources could improve cost-effectiveness by about a quarter in the 55 low- and middle-income countries that account for about 90% of all new infections, making cost efficiencies that would allow newer interventions to be funded. Read more via AIDSmap