Health

Fight against AIDS threatened, UN leader says

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says gains in life expectancy over the past decade for people with HIV could be lost within five years.

Some 22 million HIV-positive people do not have access to treatment

Rose Koluwa, an HIV-positive mother of six boys and one girl, poses with her children in her shelter in Juba, South Sudan on April 28, 2016. Rose was infected by her husband, who later died. She temporarily quit taking anti-retrovirals because she thought they were not helping her. (Albert Gonzalez/AFP/Getty Images)

Global progress fighting AIDS could be lost because prevention programs are suffering from a lack of leadership, accountability and funding, the head of the United Nations warned on Friday.

Headway in tackling the epidemic has been "inspiring," with a 42 per cent decline in AIDS-related deaths since a peak in 2004, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a report.

The progress has caused life expectancy in countries most affected by HIV to rise sharply, he added.

But those gains could be lost without more and better investment in the next five years, Ban warned.

"If we accept the status quo unchanged, the epidemic will rebound in several low- and middle-income countries," he said in a statement.

A commitment to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030 was included in the Sustainable Development Goals, an ambitious plan to end poverty and inequality which was adopted by UN member states in September.

Over the next four years, an estimated $26.2 billion will be needed to achieve that 2030 target, the report said.

Citing gains, it said antiretroviral therapy had been made available to 15 million people in the last 15 years.

During that time the number of people newly infected by HIV each year has dropped to 2 million from 3.1 million, according to UN data.

But inadequate leadership, poor accountability and declining funding have weakened HIV prevention programmes in recent years, Ban said.

New HIV infections declined just 8 per cent between 2010 and 2014 and continue to rise in eastern Europe, central Asia, the Middle East, North Africa and the Asia-Pacific region, the report added.

Some 22 million people do not have access to treatment, it said, and around half of all people living with HIV are unaware of their HIV status.