UNAIDS 2014 AIDS Epidemic Update

Download Report

Transcript UNAIDS 2014 AIDS Epidemic Update

HIV/AIDS epidemic update
Presented at the Regional Workshop on
HIV/AIDS and Housing
Biziwick Mwale
UNAIDS Regional Support Team- ESA
Johannesburg, South Africa : 15 September 2014
1
Presentation outline
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
2011 Dream: The 3 Zeros
Achieving the dream
Progress towards achieving HLM targets
UNAIDS PCB call for new targets
Proposed new targets
HIV/AIDS mainstreaming
Conclusion
2
2011: Dream
ZERO NEW INFECTION
ZERO DEATH
ZERO DISCRIMINATION
Promise and Accountability
3
Dream turned into
global action
Global leaders decide to
achieve:
 50% reduction of sexual
transmission of HIV
 15 Million people on treatment
 Elimination Targets
Reaching MDG Goal 6 by
2015 as well.
High Level Meeting (HLM) in
New York, June 2011
4
Achieving 2011: Dream
• Achieving the vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination
and zero AIDS-related deaths requires that everyone needing HIV
treatment has access to life-saving medication and HIV prevention
services.
• Antiretroviral therapy (ART):





Saves lives
Prevents new HIV infections
Prevents illness
Saves money and promotes development
Keeps people productive
• The 2013 WHO HIV treatment guidelines have greatly expanded the
number of people eligible for antiretroviral therapy
5
Number of people
living with HIV
Total
Adults
Women
Children (<15 years)
35.0 million [33.2 million – 37.2 million]
31.8 million [30.1 million – 33.7 million]
16.0 million [15.2 million – 16.9 million]
3.2 million [2.9 million – 3.5 million]
2014 epidemiology core slides
Global summary of the AIDS
epidemic2013
Total 2.1 million [1.9 million – 2.4 million]
People newly
Adults 1.9 million [1.7 million – 2.1 million]
infected
Children (<15 years) 240 000 [210 000 – 280 000]
with HIV in 2013
Total 1.5 million [1.4 million – 1.7 million]
AIDS deaths in 2013
Adults 1.3 million [1.2 million – 1.5 million]
Children (<15 years) 190 000 [170 000 – 220 000]
6
Adults and children estimated to be living with
HIV2013
Eastern Europe &
Central Asia
North America and Western and Central Europe
2.3 million
1.1 million
[980 000– 1.3 million]
[2.0 million – 3.0 million]
Middle East & North Africa
Caribbean
250 000
[230 000 – 280 000]
Latin America
1.6 million
[1.4 million – 2.1 million]
230 000
[160 000 – 330 000]
Asia and the Pacific
4.8 million
Sub-Saharan Africa
[4.1 million – 5.5 million]
24.7 million
[23.5 million – 26.1 million]
Global total: 35.0 million
Sub-Saharan Africa: 24.7 million
Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) Region: 18.5 million
7
Fifteen countries account for nearly 75% of all people living with HIV.
8
Ten countries—Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda,
United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe—account for 81% of all people living
with HIV in the region and half of those are in only two countries—Nigeria and South 9
Africa.
Source: South African national HIV prevalence, incidence and behaviour survey, 2012. Cape Town: Human Sciences Research
Council; 2014.
10
Estimated number of adults and children
newly infected with HIV2013
Eastern Europe & Central
Asia
110
000
North America and Western and Central Europe
[86 000 – 130 000]
88 000
[44 000 – 160 000]
Middle East & North Africa
Caribbean
12 000
[9400 – 14 000]
Latin America
94 000
[71 000 – 170 000]
25 000
[14 000 – 41 000]
Asia and the Pacific
350 000
Sub-Saharan Africa
[250 000 – 510 000]
1.5 million
[1.3 million – 1.6 million]
Total: 2.1 million
Sub-Saharan Africa: 1.5 million
Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) Region: 1.1 million
11
Fifteen countries account for nearly 75% of the 2.1 million new HIV infections
that occurred in 2013.
12
13
14
Estimated adult and child deaths from AIDS2013
Eastern Europe & Central
Asia
53
000
North America and Western and Central Europe
[43 000 – 69 000]
27 000
[23 000 – 34 000]
Middle East & North Africa
Caribbean
11 000
[8300 – 14 000]
Latin America
47 000
[39 000 – 75 000]
15 000
[10 000 – 21 000]
Asia and the Pacific
250 000
Sub-Saharan Africa
[210 000– 290 000]
1.1 million
[1.0 million – 1.3 million]
Global total: 1.5 million
Sub-Saharan Africa: 1.1 million
Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) Region: 730,00
15
16
17
18
Global total number of people on ART: 12.9 million
ESA Region total number of people on ART: 7.7 million
19
Gaps in global antiretroviral coverage under the 2010
and 2013 WHO HIV treatment guidelines
Total eligible:
14,000,000
28,600,000
100%
37%
61%
50%
*Numbers of people receiving treatment in
December 2013 versus
39%
(a) the numbers eligible in December 2012
under the 2010 WHO guidelines;
(b) the numbers eligible in December 2013,
under the 2013 WHO guidelines.
63%
18,563,000
0%
2010 guidelines*
2013 guidelines*
Eligible and receiving treatment
Eligible but not receiving treatment
20
Treatment coverage in Eastern and Southern
Africa
18.5 million people living with HIV in ESA in 2013
7.7 million people receiving ART in 2013
21
HIV Treatment access gap
22
UNAIDS Programme Coordinating Board (PCB) calls for
new targets
•
•
•
•
Targets drive progress
New scientific evidence
New targets for Post 2015
Bold new targets needed
to end the epidemic
demonstrates that AIDS is
a winnable challenge
23
24
New targets - For….
• Last push to meet the Ten HLM Targets of the 2011
Political Declaration
• Shaping the 2015 agenda …the unfinished business
• Sustaining the Response
• Laying a foundation for Ending AIDS
25
Proposed new treatment target
90
90
tested
on treatment
%
%
90
%
virally suppressed
26
90-90-90 Treatment Approach
• 90% of all people living with HIV know their
serostatus
• 90% of all who are eligible receive
antiretroviral therapy
• 90% of all people on antiretroviral therapy
achieve durable viral suppression.
• Achievement : reduce AIDS-related deaths by
more than 95% and bring the rate of new HIV
infections below epidemic thresholds.
27
28
Rapid Treatment Scale up …
•
•
•
•
Prevents death
Prevents new HIV infection
Saves money
Lays the foundation for the end
of the AIDS epidemic
29
Progress towards HLM targets
• Progress has been made in the HIV/AIDS response –
we need to vision beyond 2015
• Potential to accelerate adult treatment, reinvigorate
HIV prevention and improve pediatric treatment
• HIV/TB co-infection is an opportunity for building on
synergies to improve health outcomes
• Our ultimate goal is the End of AIDS.
• New and ambitious targets for treatment and
prevention will lay the foundation towards ending
AIDS by 2030.
30
HIV/AIDS Mainstreaming
Know Your
Epidemic!
Know Your
Response!
Know Your
Capacity!
31
Adopting the dynamic planning process
in HIV/AIDS Mainstreaming
Step 1: Taking a
stand for HIV
mainstreaming
Defining and
communicating the
commitment
Step 5:
Monitoring and
reviewing
progress
Step 2:
Assessing
impacts, gaps
and key available
Mainstreaming
HIV in the
Housing sector
Step 4:
Implementation
resources
(technical, human
and financial)
Step 3:
Formulating
strategies &
setting
milestones
32
32
HIV Mainstreaming
Housing sector comprehensive
HIV/AIDS Response
o
Internal HIV mainstreaming
Workplace/wellness programs
o
External HIV mainstreaming
Mandate driven interventions
o
Informed by Housing sector impact
study/KAP studies
o
Informed by sector mandates/specific
studies/possible synergies
o
Implemented through basic minimum
package by each organization
o
Integrated in organization’s overall
annual management plans
o
Monitored and reviewed annually
o
Monitored & reviewed annually
Human Development, MDGs, NDPs, NSP goals and country specific
visions
33
Important to mobilize all sectors for HIV/AIDS
response: leaving no one behind
Ambition will
be required to
get ahead of
the epidemic
and save
millions of
lives
Thank you !
34