UNICEF The United Nations Children's Fund

Empowering young Brazilians to talk to their peers about HIV

11 October 2019

New HIV infections in Brazil increased by more than 20% between 2010 and 2018, so it’s crucial that young Brazilians start talking about HIV and learn how to protect themselves. That’s the aim of a project led by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Swiping through one of his social media accounts, Jonas da Silva checks out the latest parties and public events in Salvador. He is also chatting online with other young people. They talk about sex, how and if they use condoms with their partners, what they know about HIV prevention and if they have been tested for HIV. 

“What’s cool about the project is that we have young people talking to young people. We use our language and slang to address HIV,” he says. “This connection is vital. We can see they trust us, and this is when we know we have touched them with the information they need.”

He and another 30 young people have been trained to work as volunteers in the Viva Melhor Sabendo Jovem (VMSJ) Salvador project. Their goal is to raise awareness among other young people about the importance of HIV testing and prevention. For that, they need to be where their peers are—online and on the street.

The project follows the calendar of traditional street parties and festivals, especially those that attract a large concentration of young people. It also responds to specific demands from key populations by mapping public gatherings where young lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people hang out. With a colourful small truck—the Test Truck—Mr da Silva and his co-volunteers can provide privacy for people who want HIV counselling and testing.

Since the project launched in August 2018, more than 1000 young people aged between 16 and 29 years have been tested for HIV in around 30 outings for the truck. As part of a strategy to promote testing among adolescents and young people, the volunteers also facilitate workshops on HIV and other sexually transmitted infections and host talks about sexuality and sexual health in schools. These events reached more than 400 students in the first six months of the project.

“The VMSJ Salvador peer education methodology makes it possible to engage more young people in these activities. It also helps them to become aware of the importance of HIV prevention and care,” said Cristina Albuquerque, Chief of Health and HIV/AIDS for UNICEF in Brazil. “Young people who get tested during our activities congratulate the initiative and complain that they have very few of these opportunities around town.”

In 2018, according to Ministry of Health estimates, young people aged between 15 and 24 years represented almost 15% of all new HIV diagnoses in Salvador.

“For us, too, the volunteers, this experience is important because we also start to take better care of ourselves, to apply these prevention methods to our lives and to pass the message on to those around us, to our friends and family,” said Mr da Silva.

The project is implemented in partnership with GAPA Bahia―one of the oldest nongovernmental organizations dealing with HIV issues in the country―and counts on the support of the UNAIDS office in Brazil. The young volunteers all went through a rigorous selection process before undergoing a training programme that included topics such as human rights, counselling and information on HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. They were also trained on community-based programmes, the functioning of the public health system and HIV services available in Salvador. The initiative includes a continuous training strategy on related topics.

“One of the most important things I have learned is that we have to respect each other’s choices and that we are here only to assist with information and inputs that we consider most appropriate to that person’s history and behaviour”, said Islan Barbosa, another of the volunteers.

“The project represents an important response to HIV testing demands in the city, especially among key populations, who very often avoid using public health facilities for that purpose. We are taking HIV testing to where these people are,” said Ms Albuquerque.

Focus on

Brazil

Global health organizations commit to new ways of working together for greater impact

16 October 2018

BERLIN, GERMANY, 16 October 2018—Eleven heads of the world’s leading health and development organizations today signed a landmark commitment to find new ways of working together to accelerate progress towards achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.

Coordinated by the World Health Organization, the initiative unites the work of 11 organizations, with others set to join in the next phase.

The commitment follows a request from Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo of Ghana, and Prime Minister Erna Solberg of Norway, with support from United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, to develop a global plan of action to define how global actors can better collaborate to accelerate progress towards the health-related targets of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.

“Healthy people are essential for sustainable development – to ending poverty, promoting peaceful and inclusive societies and protecting the environment. However, despite great strides made against many of the leading causes of death and disease, we must redouble our efforts or we will not reach several of the health-related targets,” the organizations announced today at the World Health Summit in Berlin. “The Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All represents an historic commitment to new ways of working together to accelerate progress towards meeting the 2030 goals. We are committed to redefine how our organizations work together to deliver more effective and efficient support to countries and to achieve better health and well-being for all people.”

The group has agreed to develop new ways of working together to maximize resources and measure progress in a more transparent and engaging way. The first phase of the plan’s development is organized under three strategic approaches: align, accelerate and account.

  • Align: The organizations have committed to coordinate programmatic, financing and operational processes to increase collective efficiency and impact on a number of shared priorities such as gender equality and reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health.
  • Accelerate: They have agreed to develop common approaches and coordinate action in areas of work that have the potential to increase the pace of progress in global health. The initial set of seven “accelerators” include community and civil society engagement, research and development, data and sustainable financing.
  • Account: To improve transparency and accountability to countries and development partners, the health organizations are breaking new ground by setting common milestones for nearly 50 health-related targets across 14 Sustainable Development Goals. These milestones will provide a critical checkpoint and common reference to determine where the world stands in 2023 and whether it is on track to reach the 2030 goals.

The Global Action Plan will also enhance collective action and leverage funds to address gender inequalities that act as barriers to accessing health, and to improve comprehensive quality health care for women and girls, including sexual and reproductive health services. 

The organizations that have already signed up to the Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All are: Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the Global Financing Facility, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, Unitaid, UN Women, the World Bank and WHO. The World Food Programme has committed to join the plan in the coming months.

The final plan will be delivered in September 2019 at the United Nations General Assembly.

For more information, www.who.int/sdg/global-action-plan

Media enquiries

Contact

UNAIDS
Sophie Barton-Knott
tel. +41 79 514 6896
bartonknotts@unaids.org

Youth voices count and safe spaces do too

09 August 2018

A global coalition of more than 80 youth organizations working on HIV (the PACT), and Youth Voices Count (YVC) launched a poll to get a sense of what young people know about sexual reproductive health.

More than half of the 270,000 young people aged 10-24 from 21 countries who responded to the U-Report poll (54% of boys and young men, and 58% of girls and young women) sought HIV and other services at a health centre or clinic in the previous three months.  About 36% of young people aged 10-24 who did not seek services reported feeling uncomfortable visiting a health centre or clinic, and more than 28% of young people (both sexes) said they felt scared to seek services.

“Even though we have the most up-to-date tools to end AIDS including ARTs, PeP, PrEP, HIV self-testing, and more, we still experience a huge challenge in ending AIDS among adolescents and young people. The HIV response is not only about pills and testing, it is about creating a friendly space where adolescents and young people feel safe and empowered.”

Niluka Perera Regional Coordinator, Youth Voices Count

The poll with support from UNAIDS, UNICEF and UNFPA was complemented by an in-depth survey and interviews led by YVC, which showed that approximately 15% of those who accessed any sexual health services in the past 6 months experienced refusal or mistreatment because of their age, sexual orientation, gender identity or HIV status. And of those who felt mistreated because of their age, 55% identified as gay, bisexual, and 25% identified themselves as living with HIV. Further, 32% of young gay, bisexual men and other young men who have sex with men, and 50% of young transgender people, felt that they had been discriminated against because of their gender identity or sexual orientation. Finally,16% of young people who identified themselves as living with HIV said they had been mistreated because of their HIV status.

“An AIDS-free generation is impossible where exclusion, marginalization, and discrimination have room to flourish and thrive. We can no longer afford to be complacent — these barriers will not be resolved on their own or with the passage of time. Not unless we actively join forces to end them.”

Damilola Walker Senior Advisor on Adolescents and HIV, UNICEF

Although healthcare settings should be safe spaces for those receiving care, this is not the case. Policies and attitudes remain barriers to youth-friendly HIV and sexual and reproductive health services. Indeed, 37% of respondents who reported having visited a clinic were not willing to recommend doing so to their peers.

This year’s theme for International Youth Day is Safe Spaces for Youth, highlighting the need of young people for safe spaces to come together, hang out, and participate in decision making processes as well as freely express themselves. This includes in healthcare settings, which should be places of safety and refuge, free from stigma, maltreatment, and violence.

“AIDS is far from over, but it can be if young people are informed, free and able to access services that are safe and responsive to their specific needs.”

Michel Sidibé Executive Director, UNAIDS

Every day, approximately 1600 young people are infected with HIV, while one young person dies of AIDS-related illnesses every 10 minutes. Young women aged 15-24 are particularly affected. In sub-Saharan Africa, young women are twice as likely to be infected with HIV as their male counterparts. And young key populations (including gay men and other men who have sex with men, bisexual people, transgender people, young sex workers and young people who inject drugs) are at a high risk of HIV around the world due to rights violations, discrimination, exclusion, criminalization and violence. Of the young people living with HIV globally, most do not know their status.

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Download more slides like this from 2018 Global AIDS Update Miles to Go 

Progress, but still miles to go, to increase HIV prevention and treatment in Central African Republic

03 August 2018

Some 18 months after the launch of the catch-up plan, the National AIDS Council (CNLS), the Ministry of Health and UNAIDS co-organized a workshop in Bangui, to take stock of the progress and the challenges to accelerate access to treatment for people living with HIV in the Central African Republic. The workshop also served as an opportunity to renew political commitment to the HIV response and to call for urgent action on prevention.

The Prime Minister of the Central African Republic, Simplice Mathieu Sarandji, opened the meeting with 80 stakeholders present, including members of government, civil society organisations, people living with HIV, members of key populations, as well as local governments, traditional and religious leaders.

Key areas of progress since the launch of the catch-up plan in January 2017 included the development of new policies to implement test and treat, and the increase in the number of people on HIV treatment from 25,000 in 2016 to 34,000 in June 2018. Community treatment groups have been delivering HIV treatment to people in remote and insecure regions such as the eastern town of Zemio. In addition, a community treatment observatory is helping monitor access to and quality of HIV care in Bangui.

However, there are miles to go. Less than 35% of people living with HIV in Central African Republic access treatment — this is among the lowest in sub-Saharan Africa. Challenges include an inadequate monitoring and evaluation system, a lack of effective supervision of facilities providing HIV services, limited community engagement to implement HIV testing and treatment, as well as limited financial commitments to reach treatment targets. Most agreed on the need to improve coordination.

As a result, participants identified priorities for the next six months to reach treatment targets for 2019. All stressed that communities, people living with HIV and key populations must be involved every step of the way. In addition, participants stressed the urgent need for increased domestic and donor funding.

A steering committee and technical working groups prepared the two-day workshop based on available data and on-the ground site visits. The groups included representatives from the Ministry of Health, CNLS, community organisations, people living with HIV, international NGOs such as Medécins Sans Frontières and the French Red Cross as well as UNICEF, UNFPA, WHO and UNAIDS.

Quotes

“Our country and government are committed to accelerating the pace of people accessing medicine and to reach the goal of zero new HIV infections. To ensure this, we will fund HIV treatment for an additional 5000 people in 2019. We will also rapidly develop a national HIV prevention plan.”

Simplice Mathieu Sarandji Prime Minister of the Central African Republic and First Vice-President of the Comité National de Lutte contre le SIDA

“It is time to go faster with our catch-up plan. We must change our approaches, build on progress and adapt when necessary to reach our goals. Our objective is to focus on the communities where people are most vulnerable to HIV infection and to provide them with effective services that respect human rights.”

Pierre Somse Minister of Health and Population, Central African Republic

“We will not put more people on treatment and reduce new HIV infections without involving us. Stigma and discrimination remain serious barriers to our efforts. This is why people living with HIV want to play an active role in encouraging HIV testing, prevention and treatment for all.”

Bienvenu Gazalima Central African Republic Network of People Living with HIV (RECAPEV)

Heads of H6 agencies embrace new results framework

07 May 2018

Around the world, many women, children and adolescents still have little or no access to quality health services and education, clean air and water, adequate sanitation and good nutrition. And far too many face violence and discrimination, unequal access to power and opportunity, and numerous barriers that harm their physical, mental and emotional health and well-being.

To accelerate change, the executive heads of the H6 partnership met on the sidelines of the United Nations System Chief Executives Board in London, United Kingdom, on 2 May and agreed a new results framework, H6 Results 2020. H6 Results 2020 aims to shape the H6 partnership into a trusted, valued source for technical support, strategic policy advice and best practices for the health and well-being of women, children and adolescents.

Developed under the chairpersonship of UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé, H6 Results 2020 is closely aligned with the Every Woman Every Child Every Adolescent Global Strategy and the 2020 Every Woman Every Child Partners’ Framework. H6 Results 2020 sets ambitious goals while committing to deliver on a number of concrete results for 2020.

“I am excited about our revitalized H6 partnership. As the technical arm of the Every Woman Every Child movement, we plan to further streamline and simplify the health architecture, coordinating with key partners to leverage political capital, technical expertise and advocacy for results for women, children and adolescents everywhere,” said Mr Sidibé.

Taking forward the vision endorsed by the executive heads in March 2018, H6 Results 2020 builds on the achievements of the H6 to date and reinforces existing mechanisms while strengthening United Nations mechanisms to support countries. It outlines how the H6 will harmonize efforts of the six H6 organizations and with key partners at the country, regional and global levels and will focus on the countries with the highest burdens of maternal, child and adolescent mortality and morbidity for intensified action.

“The H6 partnership plays a critical role in ensuring that countries focus on the health needs of women in an intersectional way, with laser-like focus on gender equality, human rights and other enablers, such as education,” said Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the Executive Director of UN Women.

By amplifying its added value, the H6 partnership seeks to serve as a living laboratory for United Nations reform—heeding the call of the United Nations Secretary-General for a more country-focused, coordinated, efficient and accountable development system better able to assist countries in implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

“It is important that the United Nation comes together to focus its technical support on key priorities in a few high-burden countries, and what must drive our focus is results for people,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of the World Health Organization.

While committed to driving progress across a range of priorities for women, children and adolescent health, H6 Results 2020 puts clear emphasis on reaching adolescents. Adolescent girls and boys (aged 10–19 years) remain a particularly underserved population by the health and social programmes of many countries. Ensuring the health and well-being of adolescents is critical to delivering on the mandate of each of the H6 partners.

“The H6 partnership has proven that working in close collaboration and bringing different expertise and experience to the table is not only effective in enabling countries to deliver rights-based quality care for the women and girls left furthest behind, but also ensures strong country ownership,” said Natalia Kanem, the Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund.

A united rallying cry: Time to make health care systems more flexible and innovative

16 April 2018

Seven months after launching the catch-up plan in western and central Africa, progress on increasing the numbers of people on antiretroviral treatment continues to lag in the region. Many countries will not reach key targets by 2020 if the current systems remain unchanged.

"Overall we saw a 10% percent increase of people on treatment, which is not enough," said UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé. "Now, there is even more a sense of urgency."

Mr Sidibé, however, pointed to the success in the Democratic Republic of Congo where there was a clear increase in the number of people living with HIV accessing ARVs. The reasons for the positive trend included civil society and political leadership working closely together as well as community HIV testing and the training of 11 000 health care workers.

"More than ever there is a need to rethink health systems and alternatives for people to access health care," he said.

The call to delegate patient care to communities was a major rallying call during AFRAVIH, the international francophone HIV and hepatitis conference held in Bordeaux, France, early April. Mr Sidibé briefly shared the stage at the opening ceremony with the civil society organisation Coalition PLUS. They declared that the key to success in ending AIDS involved joining forces between doctors and community health workers and giving more leeway to communities to respond to the local needs of their own people.

Under the banner, "De-medicalize" the organisation explained that doctors will never be replaced but that there were too few of them and people living with HIV didn't require acute care.

Coalition Plus' recent report states that governments and the medical practitioners should delegate more tasks to nurses and community health workers. In addition to allowing for more targeted prevention and faster access to treatment, delegation of non-medical tasks would lighten the load on overburdened health systems. West and central Africa represent 17% of the total population living with HIV but 30% of deaths in the region are from AIDS-related illnesses. This is a region, according to UNAIDS and its partners, that can truly benefit from community models of care.

What worries Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is the risk of a significant drop in resources for treatment will hamper recent improvements in west and central Africa. This concern stems from the fact that Global Fund estimates a 30% drop in fund allocations to the region for 2018 – 2020 compared to signed HIV grants in the previous allocation period. In 2016, MSF was among the first to sound alarm bells regarding the region's high HIV death toll and the up to 80% of children unable to access antiretroviral therapy. MSF HIV Policy Advisor and Advocacy Officer Nathalie Cartier said that they supported the west and central Africa catch-up plan but that it needed to be fully implemented. "Political will has been promising but now it's time to make it a reality on the ground so that people living with HIV can reap the benefits," she said.

Global Fund supported the catch-up plan and works closely with countries in order to maximize the impact of the investments. They believe that leveraging additional domestic financing for health is crucial to increase country ownership and build sustainable programs.

All the more reason to decentralize healthcare systems and capitalize on innovations to keep health costs down.  HIV self-testing, new medicines and high impact strategies involving communities are critical to improving efficiencies.  "With point-of-care (POC) testing in communities and homes, delays are minimal between diagnosis and initiating treatment," said Cheick Tidiane Tall, Director of Réseau EVA, a network of pediatric doctors specialized in HIV care. “In the long run, that's a lot of people and resources saved,” he added.

Côte d'Ivoire Infectious and Tropical Diseases professor Serge Eholié couldn't agree more.  "Flexible health care systems capitalizing on various innovations makes a lot of sense," he said. Turning to the Minister of Health in the Central African Republic, Pierre Somse, he asked, 'How do you respond?'

Mr Somse, also a trained doctor, said, "We doctors will stay doctors. However, there is a need for us to lean on communities and vice versa."  He added, "at the heart of the issue are patients and they are and should always be the priority."

H6 commits to accelerate results for health

26 March 2018

The H6 combines the strengths of six international organizations to help countries to realize the United Nations Secretary-General’s Every Woman Every Child strategy. The partnership mobilizes political commitment and resources to transform societies so that women, children and adolescents can realize their rights to the highest attainable standards of health and well-being.

High-level representatives of the six organizations met in New York, United States of America, to shape a shared vision for the H6. During the meeting, which took place on 21 March, health leaders committed to jointly deliver more and faster results in countries.

The Chair of the H6, Michel Sidibé, shared his vision for the partnership, including how it can evolve to meet the demands of the Sustainable Development Goals, including in humanitarian settings, and be a leading platform to advance United Nations reform.

“As a transformative platform, I see the H6 as an outstanding opportunity to rapidly bring United Nations reform to life and deliver results for every woman, child and adolescent on the ground,” said Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS.

The participants were united in their ambition to make the H6 a one-stop shop for countries for strategic policy advice, technical assistance and strategic information. Adolescent health, particularly for 10–18-year-olds, was discussed as a key focus area.

“I see an effective H6 partnership as an important way to drive health impact at the country level for all children, including by better addressing gaps in services for the age group from 10 to18 years old, and by planting the seeds of development in humanitarian contexts,” said Henrietta Fore, the Executive Director of the United Nations Children’s Fund.

The participants also committed to ensure policy-making in which communities have a voice and decided to build innovative partnerships with stakeholders beyond the United Nations.

Enhanced transparency and accountability of the H6 and reducing fragmentation and duplication in the United Nations system, as well as between the United Nations and the World Bank, will be key to success, as will a strong focus on joint reporting of results. The H6 will also work in close collaboration with the Global Financing Facility and the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health.

“The United Nations Population Fund is strongly committed to the H6 partnership, which has proven that working in close collaboration and bringing different expertise and experience to the table is not only effective in enabling countries to deliver quality care for the women and girls left furthest behind, but also ensures strong country ownership,” said Natalia Kanem, the Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund.

The H6 principals will now develop a results framework and reconvene in May to review and endorse it. They are aiming to adopt a road map to roll out new ways of working by mid-year.

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