• PLoS medicine · Sep 2022

    HIV prevention for the next decade: Appropriate, person-centred, prioritised, effective, combination prevention.

    • Peter Godfrey-Faussett, Luisa Frescura, Abdool KarimQuarraishaQCAPRISA, Durban, South Africa., Michaela Clayton, Peter D Ghys, and (on behalf of the 2025 prevention targets working group).
    • Data for Impact Practice, UNAIDS, Geneva, Switzerland.
    • PLoS Med. 2022 Sep 1; 19 (9): e1004102.

    AbstractUNAIDS and a broad range of partners have collaborated to establish a new set of HIV prevention targets to be achieved by 2025 as an intermediate step towards the sustainable development target for 2030.The number of new HIV infections in the world continues to decline, in part due to the extraordinary expansion of effective HIV treatment. However, the decline is geographically heterogeneous, with some regions reporting a rise in incidence. The incidence target that was agreed for 2020 has been missed.A range of exciting new HIV prevention technologies have become available or are in the pipeline but will only have an impact if they are accessible and affordable and delivered within systems that take full account of the social and political context in which most infections occur. Most new infections occur in populations that are marginalised or discriminated against due to structural, legal, and cultural barriers.The new targets imply a new approach to HIV prevention that emphasises appropriate, person-centred, prioritised, effective, combination HIV prevention within a framework that reduces existing barriers to services and acknowledges heterogeneity, autonomy, and choice.These targets have consequences for people working in HIV programmes both for delivery and for monitoring and evaluation, for health planners setting local and national priorities, and for funders both domestic and global. Most importantly, they have consequences for people who are at risk of HIV exposure and infection.Achieving these targets will have a huge impact on the future of the HIV epidemic and put us back on track towards ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.

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