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While global prevalence of HIV infection (percentage of persons infected with
HIV) appears to have stabilised in recent years, the global number of people
living with HIV is increasing because of ongoing accumulation of new infections
with longer survival times, measured over a continuously growing general
population.
Across the world, a small but growing number of countries have reduced HIV
prevalence through sound prevention efforts. The high rates of transmission of
HIV result largely from failure to use the available and effective prevention
strategies and tools, and poor coverage of HIV prevention programmes. HIV
prevention services were only reaching 20% of people in need in 2005, while
coverage for key populations at higher risk of exposure to HIV were considerably
lower.
Effective HIV prevention programming focuses on the critical relationships
between the epidemiology of HIV infection, the risk behaviours that expose to
HIV transmission, and also addresses the collective social and institutional
factors, such as sexual norms, gender inequality, and HIV related stigma, that
will otherwise continue to fuel HIV epidemic.
Risk behaviours are
enmeshed in complex webs of economic, legal, political, cultural and
psychosocial determinants that must be analysed and addressed by policies that
are also effectively implemented, and through scaled-up programming.
Comprehensive HIV prevention requires a combination of programmatic and
policy actions that promote safer behaviours, reduce vulnerability to
transmission, encourage use of key prevention technologies, promote social norms
that favor risk reduction and address drivers of the epidemic.
Effective prevention efforts focus on measures that directly support risk
reduction by providing information and skills as well as access to needed
commodities (such as condoms, sterile injecting equipment, and drug substitution
therapy) for the populations most in need. In short, national planners and
policymakers must: 1) Know their epidemic; and 2) Set priorities accordingly.
Prevention and treatment must be scaled up in a balanced way, to capitalise
fully on synergies between the two. Comprehensive HIV prevention requires a
combination of programmatic interventions and policy actions that promote safer
behaviours, reduce biological and social vulnerabilities to transmission,
encourage use of key prevention technologies, and promote social norms that
favour risk reduction.
HIV prevention includes addressing an array of issues discussed in other
thematic areas in the policy section of the website. Forging links among HIV
prevention with related programmes and services such as sexual and reproductive
health services and legal services for women, can also contribute to
intensification of HIV prevention. Strong linkages as well as special efforts to
reach those at higher risk and excluded from access to services will result in
more relevant and cost-effective programmes with greater impact.
UNAIDS coordinates its own collective efforts on scaling up prevention,
within the ambit of universal access to prevention, care, support and treatment,
through building on the comparative advantages of the UNAIDS Cosponsors and
Secretariat to support scale up of high quality, comprehensive HIV prevention
programmes at all levels. UNAIDS also collaborates with a large number of other
stakeholders and promotes and supports the development of strong HIV prevention
constituencies. The main focus of UNAIDS on intensification of HIV prevention is
at country level as part of its ongoing efforts to support countries to
strengthen their overall national responses to the AIDS epidemic.
Essential Policy Actions for HIV Prevention
- Ensure
that human rights are promoted, protected and respected and that measures are
taken to eliminate discrimination and combat stigma.
- Build and
maintain leadership from all sections of society, including governments,
affected communities, nongovernmental organisations, faith-based organisations,
the education sector, media, the private sector and trade unions.
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Involve people living with HIV, in the design, implementation and evaluation of
prevention strategies, addressing the distinct prevention needs.
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Address cultural norms and beliefs, recognising both the key role they may play
in supporting prevention efforts and the potential they have to fuel HIV
transmission.
- Promote gender equality and address gender norms and
relations to reduce the vulnerability of women and girls, involving men and boys
in this effort.
- Promote widespread knowledge and awareness of how HIV
is transmitted and how infection can be averted.
- Promote the links
between HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health.
- Support the mobilisation of community-based responses throughout the continuum of
prevention, care and treatment.
- Promote programmes targeted at HIV
prevention needs of key affected groups and populations.
- Mobilising
and strengthening financial, and human and institutional capacity across all
sectors, particularly in health and education.
- Review and reform
legal frameworks to remove barriers to effective, evidence based HIV prevention,
combat stigma and discrimination and protect the rights of people living with
HIV or vulnerable or at risk to HIV.
- Ensure that sufficient
investments are made in the research and development of, and advocacy for, new
prevention technologies.
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