London - The international community has made extraordinary
progress in the past decade in the fight against Aids, but a funding crisis is
putting those gains at risk, the United Nations health agencies said on
Wednesday.
A World Health Organisation-led report said the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes Aids now infects about 34 million
people around the world and has proven a "formidable challenge" for
scientists and public health experts.
"But the tide is turning," it said. "The
tools to achieve an Aids-free generation are in our hands".
A severe funding crisis at the world's largest backer of the fight against Aids and a decline in international donor money to battle the disease is dampening optimism in the HIV/Aids community about an eventual end to the pandemic.
Annual funding for HIV/Aids programmes fell to $15bn in 2010
from $15.9bn in 2009, well below the estimated $22bn to $24bn the UN agencies
say is needed by 2015 to pay for a comprehensive, effective global response.
The public-private Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis
and Malaria, the world's largest financial backer of HIV treatment and
prevention programmes, said last week it was cancelling new grants for countries
battling these diseases and would make no new funding available until 2014.
"Just as the world is making huge strides in the fight
against HIV and Aids, the goal of creating an Aids-free generation, where no
children are born with HIV, will not be possible unless the Global Fund is able
to continue scaling up its work," said Patrick Watt, Save the Children's
global campaign director.
"With the main funding body... now out of cash, there is a serious crisis," said Tido von Schoen-Angerer of the international medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres. "It's like a car going full speed has suddenly run out of gas."
In an interview with Reuters as the UN agencies' report was
released Gottfried Hirnschall, the World Health Organisation's (WHO's) director for HIV/Aids, said progress
in cutting the number of new HIV infections and dramatically increasing access
to life-saving Aids drugs made this a critical time in the battle.
Scientific studies in the past year have also shown that
getting timely Aids drug treatment to those with HIV can significantly cut the
number of people who become newly infected with the virus.
"This is a really exciting year, because we're seeing
downward trends in those areas where we want to see downward trends - in new
infections and in mortality - and we're seeing upward trends where we'd like to
see them, primarily in (treatment) coverage rates," Hirnschall said
Latest figures in Wednesday's report and from a UNAIDS
global study last week show the number of new HIV infections fell to 2.7
million in 2010, down from 3.1 million in 2001, while the number of people
getting life-saving Aids drugs rose to 6.65 million in 2010 from just 400 000
in 2003.
Hirnschall said the data suggested the WHO's goal to have
zero new infections, zero deaths and zero stigma associated with HIV
"could in the not too distant future become a reality".
But the big risk lies in the funding, he said.
"We already have a $7bn shortfall for this year - and
what's even more alarming is that we also had almost a billion dollars less
this year than we did last."
With many large international donor countries struggling
with recession and debt crises, public health experts said it was crucial for
countries affected by HIV/Aids to do all they can to fund their own programmes
and make resources go further.
Wednesday's report, released ahead of World Aids Day on December 1 by the WHO, the United Nations Aids programme UNAIDS and the United Nations children's fund UNICEF, said treatment, prevention and outreach programmes are becoming more efficient, with health clinics integrating services and local communities finding more effective ways to get medicines to HIV patients.
"2011 has been a game-changing year. With new science,
unprecedented political leadership and continued progress in the Aids response,
countries have a window of opportunity to seize this momentum," said Paul
De Lay, deputy director of UNAIDS.
"However, gains made to date are being threatened by a decline in resources."
Hirnschall said donors should recognise that stepping up investment now will save lives, and more money in the long run.
"The risk is that we carry on as we are for the next 20
years and the whole epidemic will just linger on and on. Or we could load upfront and make a big investment now, and then the numbers will really start to
come down and it will pay off.
"The question is, is the world ready to do that?"