AIDS is an injustice because today we have tools for prevention, testing & treatement. But last year we had 1.5 million people were newly infected with HIV, and AIDS took 650,000 lives. When you peel that and see who is dying, you see that #inequalites are at the root. #Equalize
In 🇺🇸 Black people are 8.5x more likely to be infected with HIV than white people. Black gay men in US face 1 in 2 risk of contracting HIV across their lifetime. This is a higher risk than the average in 🇺🇬 and almost as high as in hot spot countries like 🇿🇦. #Equalize#EndAIDS
Countries w/highest HIV rates are struggling to pay debt, squeezing out expenditures on health & education. In the midst of COVID, when rich countries put $17TR into recovery, dev'ing countries were continuing to make debt repayments 4X their health budgets. This is an injustice!
We saw Pfizer make $37bn in profits, through the help of taxpayers money. We argue against the trade rules that treat lifesaving treatments the same as luxury items like a Gucci handbag. They are injustices that we need to fight at a global level. @YaleGH
Pharma companies in the US paid more than $100mil in lobbying fees lobbying Congress. Why? So that they can keep the price of medicine high. This is part of the problem. The corporate greed and the national system that hurt ordinary citizens. #NoCovidMonopolies#Health4All
Some see health as an issue of aid. But it shouldn’t be like that if we corrected the tax injustices. Global rules drive inequalities that result in ill health for some, death for some, and huge mega profits for a handful. We need to change the global rules of trade & taxation.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
AIDS is not over. An AIDS death every minute is an emergency! HIV rates are not following the trajectory that we together promised. Indeed, amidst the fall-out from the Covid crisis, we could even see a resurgent pandemic. #HLM2021AIDS #endAIDSby2030
📽️ bit.ly/3pvOkqd
@UNAIDS@UN_PGA@AminaJMohammed But a never-ending HIV pandemic is not our fate. Even in spite of all the set-backs, we can #endAIDSby2030. Business as usual however, would fail. The programs that have secured substantial progress will not enable us to finish the journey because the road is blocked #HLM2021AIDS
The evidence and analysis are clear. Inequalities in power, status, rights & voice are driving the HIV pandemic.
The #G7 are failing in their duty to provide global leadership to end the COVID19 pandemic for everyone everywhere. More than 1m people have died from COVID since G7 leaders last met back in February, when they pledged to increase the global vaccine supply.
@ChathamHouse@CHGlobalHealth@UNAIDS@HelenClarkNZ@DrMikeRyan@yates_rob@G7 Of the 1.77bn doses of COVID vaccines given globally, 28% have been in @G7 countries. In contrast just 0.3% of COVID jabs have been given in low-income countries.
COVID-19 related deaths are increasingly concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. This is heart-breaking.
The scale of this inequality is not an accident. It was predictable months ago. President Ramaphosa @CyrilRamaphosa called it “#VaccineApartheid” - and it is.
It is 20 years since the first UN General Assembly Special Session and 40 years since the first cases of AIDS were reported. In this important year, we also mark 25 years since the world came together and establishment of @UNAIDS. #HLM2021AIDS#EndInequalitiesEndAIDS
@UNAIDS Since the start of the epidemic 77.5m people have become infected with HIV & 34.7m have died of AIDS. But in the past 40 yrs, we have made huge progress, the world came together, activists came together, govts came together- to turn the epidemic around
We find ourselves at a critical moment to get the world back on track to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030. The COVID-19 pandemic has shown the fragility of the health and development gains made over the past decades. #HLM2021AIDS #SDGs
Since the start of the epidemic 77.5 million people have become infected with HIV and more than 34 million have died of AIDS-related causes.
However, HIV is more than a disease.
It's an issue of social justice.
No one should be infected and no one should die.
In the past 40 years, we have made huge progress in turning the epidemic around: 75% of all people living with HIV are now on treatment. That’s more than 27 million people, on treatment today.