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[…] Launched on World AIDS Day, the Five-Year Strategy of the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) outlines the high-level direction of the program for its next phase. This strategy reflects lessons learned in the first five years of the program, expands existing commitments around service delivery, and places a heightened emphasis on sustainability.  | |
[…] Under PEPFAR, the U.S. Government has committed approximately $25 billion to the fight against global HIV/AIDS, including contributions to the Global Fund. The U.S. Government is the first and largest donor to the Fund, contributing $3.5 billion to date, with additional pledges that will bring the total U.S. Government contribution to $4.5 billion.  |
[…] His duties include running the entire U.S. Government’s international HIV/AIDS efforts. In this role, Ambassador Goosby oversees the implementation of the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief that is, PEPFAR – as well as the U.S. Government engagement with the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.  | |
[…] How does Botswana, once seen as one of the most promising developing countries in sub-Saharan Africa, fight back against the ominous threat of AIDS? By establishing partnerships with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, U.S. universities and Merck Company, Botswana is providing better health care for Batswana with HIV/AIDS and is helping to reverse the “brain drain” among medical professionals in that country.  | |
[…] A U.S. program that supports millions of HIV/AIDS sufferers in Africa through critical drug therapy has “impacted more people and taken them away from certain death than any other health program,” says Dr. Eric Goosby, U.S. global AIDS coordinator and administrator of the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).  | |
[…] The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has approved grants worth $2.4 billion to fight the diseases during the next two years. The amount represents a slight decrease in funding levels, though the three killer diseases show little sign of abatement.
The $2.4 billion figure approved by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is $350 million less than last year’s amount, which was set before the full effects of the world economic slump were known.
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[…] Medical researchers in Thailand have developed an approach to prevent HIV the same way it has been treated, by using a combination vaccine to successfully halt the spread of the disease.
Public health officials announced September 24 in Bangkok that they successfully used two previously unsuccessful HIV vaccines in combination in a large, six-year study to prevent people from getting HIV, which causes AIDS. The vaccines used in the study cannot cause HIV infection because they are not made from and do not contain the whole virus, active or dead, the medical researchers said.
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AIDS targets the young and strong. It leaves children without parents, schools without teachers, hospitals without nurses and doctors, fields without farmers. It undermines economies, it widens poverty, it sows the seeds of instability. And for families, its damage is measured in loved ones lost; in nations, it’s measured in potential lost.
And six years ago, President Bush launched a path-breaking response to the AIDS epidemic, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known as PEPFAR.  |
[…] A new partnership between universities in the United States and Africa aims to be an agent for change in improving health outcomes for those afflicted with HIV-related diseases.
With help from a $4.97 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a collaborative effort between Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda, seeks to enhance research and improve health in Uganda and East Africa.
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[…] First of all – and I think you all have a fact sheet that’s got two rather extraordinary tables – figures, rather, showing not only the final result but the annual results. Five years ago, the President set a final goal, but also annual targets to achieve that goal, and we’ve pretty much met them every year. And that’s a rather extraordinary thing. Sadly, it’s not something that happens in government all that often, where you set goals with intervening annual benchmarks and achieve them.  |
[…] When PEPFAR was announced, the President set out aggressive goals of supporting treatment for 2 million people, preventing 7 million new infections, and care for 10 million people infected or affected by HIV/AIDS, including orphans and vulnerable children. It is estimated that in 2003.  | |
[…] Since 2004, the United States has supported anti-retroviral treatment for more than 1.64 million people in 15 countries. South Africa, with the world's biggest HIV-positive population, received $600 million in funding in 2008 through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). The U.S. Agency for International Development provides funding to development groups that implement the programs.  |
[…] THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. Today is World AIDS Day, a day we reaffirm our commitment to fight HIV/AIDS at home and abroad. Thirty-three million people around the world are living with HIV, including more than one million Americans. Once again this year, to observe World AIDS Day, there is a red ribbon on the North Portico of the White House. The ribbon is a symbol of our resolve to confront HIV/AIDS and to affirm the matchless value of every life.  | |
[…] According to estimates from the UNAIDS 2008 Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, around 30.8 million adults and 2 million children were living with HIV at the end of 2007.
On December 1, at 8 a.m. EST (13:00 GMT), in commemoration of World AIDS Day, Dr. Amita Gupta will discuss the impact of HIV/AIDS, the fight against it and the treatments for it, paying particular attention to anti-retroviral treatment and the management of opportunistic infections, such as tuberculosis, that plague those infected with AIDS.
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[…] The fight against HIV/AIDS is a noble and necessary battle. As part of this fight, in 2003 my Administration launched the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Through this program, the United States has partnered with other countries, local communities, and faith-based organizations around the world to support HIV/AIDS treatment, care, and prevention activities. In July 2008, we worked with the Congress to reauthorize this important program for another 5 years.  |
[…] For World AIDS Day, December 1, United States leaders are calling on Americans to celebrate life and commemorate those who were once dying but are now living and thriving in the fight against the global epidemic of HIV/AIDS.
The State Department encouraged its posts to mark AIDS Day 2008 by “celebrating the work of the dedicated men and women in nations affected by HIV/AIDS who are choosing life, saving the lives of their fellow countrymen and women, and creating hope for a future free of HIV/AIDS.”
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[…] The Tesfa community association in western Addis Ababa, an idir that has adopted a new name and broader mission, helps 4,300 orphans and vulnerable children as well as the elderly people who have become their caregivers.
“Many grandparents take care of their grandchildren because [the children’s] parents have died from AIDS,” said Tesfa chairman Berehnu Abera. “The demand for our services is rising because of the epidemic.  |
[…] According to estimates from the UNAIDS 2008 Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, around 30.8 million adults and 2 million children were living with HIV at the end of 2007.
On December 1, at 8 a.m. EST (13:00 GMT), in commemoration of World AIDS Day, Dr. Amita Gupta will discuss the impact of HIV/AIDS, the fight against it and the treatments for it, paying particular attention to anti-retroviral treatment and the management of opportunistic infections, such as tuberculosis, that plague those infected with AIDS.
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Celebrating Life: The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief 2009 (United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, released January 2009- a 4.7Mb
.pdf file) |
The President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Office of the United States Global
AIDS, released December 2008- a 1.2Mb
.pdf file) |
Action
Today, A Foundation for Tomorrow: The
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Office
of the United States Global AIDS and State Dept.. released February
2006 - 2.1Mb
.pdf file) |
Engendering
Bold Leadership: The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Office
of the United States Global AIDS and State Dept.. released November
2005 - 2.6Mb
.pdf file) |
UNAIDS
- AIDS Epidemic Update 2005 (released November 21, 2005 also
available as a 4.7Mb
.pdf file) |
The "Three Ones" in
action: where we are and where we go from here (a UNAIDS Report
released May 2005 - 1.16Kb .pdf
file) |
"HIV
- Related Stigma, Discrimination and Human Rights Violations" (a
UNAIDS Report released April 2005 - 946K
.pdf file) |
"An Exceptional
Response to AIDS" (a UNAIDS Report 1.7M
.pdf file) |
UNAIDS
- 2004 Report on the global AIDS epidemic (released July 6, 2004) |
Fact Sheet - "The
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Five Year Strategy" (a
State Dept/Bureau of Public Affairs Fact Sheet, released February
2004 - 879K .pdf file) |
-
Full Text of H.R.1298, signed into law on May 27, 2003 (a 130K .pdf
file) |
"AIDS Epidemic Update 2003" (a
UNAIDS Report, updated December 2003) |
"Youth and HIV/AIDS:
A New American Agenda" (a ONAP Report, released October
1, 2000 - a 5.1Mb file in .pdf
format) |
"AIDS:
The Threat to World Security" (a State Dept. Electronic
Journal, released July 2000) |
UNAIDS Reports on the Global AIDS Epidemic |
The
Global Infectious Disease Threat and its Implication for the United
States (a National Intelligence Estimate from the CIA, released
January 2000) |
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" VOICES OF HOPE"
The U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)
“ Voices of Hope” features
community leaders and recipients of services from seven PEPFAR countries: Guyana,
Kenya, Mozambique, South Africa, Uganda, Vietnam, and Zambia. These people
talk in their own words about how PEPFAR’s diverse prevention,
treatment and care strategy is making a difference in their lives.
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Congressional Resource Service Reports- U.S. International HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Spending: FY2004-FY2008 (updated September 11, 2007 - a 58K .pdf file)
- (The) Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria: Progress Report and Issues for Congress (updated June 11, 2007 - a 180K .pdf file)
- AIDS in Africa (updated November 24, 2006 - a 123K .pdf file)
- HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean and Central America (updated June 20, 2006 - a 65K .pdf file)
- AIDS in the Caribbean and Central America (updated January 18, 2006 - a 65K .pdf file)
- HIV/AIDS International Programs: Appropriations, FY2003-FY2006 (updated January 3, 2006 - a 43K .pdf file)
- (The) Global Fund and PEPFAR in U.S. International AIDS Policy (updated November 3, 2005 - a 77K .pdf file)
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