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12th Jun, 2026 12:00 AM
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Funding Cuts Drive Sharp Drop in HIV Prevention, UNAIDS Says

LONDON, June 12 (Reuters) - Almost 40% fewer people got a drug to help prevent HIV infection in 2025 than in the previous year, as global aid funding cuts ⁠hit preventive services particularly hard, early data presented by UNAIDS on Friday showed. 

Across 62 countries, 38% fewer people received pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, at least once in 2025 compared ⁠to 2024, the agency said. That represented a decline of 1.2 million people -- from 3.3 million to 2.1 million -- across countries including Nigeria, Cameroon and ⁠Uganda. 

Funding for condoms, another preventive tool, fell by more ‌than 90% in some countries, the report added. 

"We are undergoing perhaps the most serious disruption of HIV services since the HIV response started," said Winnie Byanyima, head of UNAIDS. "We can't sit here thinking that the impact isn't so dramatic." 

RISE IN INFECTIONS 

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She said funding cuts combined with rising pushback on the rights of key populations - notably  LGBTQ people - had combined to bring about the drop in access, which ‌would lead to a rise in new infections and deaths in the coming years without action.

In 2025, new infections ​declined slightly on ‌2024, by around 100,000 to 1.2 million, the report showed. ‌However, HIV testing fell by 22% in some high-burden countries, so the full picture is unclear, Byanyima added.

However, the numbers of people on treatment rose by ⁠2.7% year-on-year, with 32.1 million people taking antiretroviral drugs as of December 2025. 

This ‌was slightly below previous annual average ⁠increases of around 4%, UNAIDS said, but was ​also a sign that countries and communities had stepped up ‌to fill in the gaps on treatment and avert the worst-case scenario some had predicted when funding fell. Nevertheless, they were not coping as well with the funding cuts to prevention, the data showed. 

Domestic funding for addressing HIV rose in a number of ​countries for the first time since COVID-19, the report added, although the agency warned ‌about ‌the closure of large numbers of community-based organizations that were the backbone of the response and largely funded by international aid.  

UNAIDS released ‌the data ahead of a high-level ​meeting on HIV/AIDS at the UN in New York later this month, calling for global solidarity. But the agency itself is also battling for its own future, after the UN proposed closing it in 2026 to cope with its ⁠own funding crisis.

Byanyima said there was a "transformation" of the agency under way and a final report would come ‌out in October. 

"What I'm certain about is that the United Nations will not drop its leadership role in the global ​response," she said. 

(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby, Editing by William Maclean)


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