Opinions: Bridging The Divide To Stop The Spread Of HIV; Ending Future World Hunger

To Stop HIV Spread, Bridge The Divide Between ‘Privileged’ And ‘Forsaken’  

“With less than half the people who need treatment having access and with each day more people becoming infected with HIV than are started on treatment, we are mortgaging our future. But we are also exposing a fundamental social injustice – between the privileged and the forsaken – a divide we can bridge,” Michael Sidibe, the executive director of UNAIDS, writes in a Daily Nation opinion piece. Although an “acceptable vaccine is not yet ready,” Sidibe writes that we should “prepare today for tomorrow” and “learn from the lessons of the AIDS response thus far.”

He outlines three challenges that need to be tackled. “The first challenge is access and affordability … The second challenge is creating the conditions for massive uptake of an effective vaccine … The third challenge is in creating health systems capable of delivering the vaccine.” According to Sidibe, “The world needs a strong HIV prevention campaign that is grounded in human rights. It is high time to end discrimination, bad laws, and harmful social norms that fuel HIV transmission” (9/30).

‘Political Will’ Needed To Prevent Future World Hunger

“The food shortages – and even food riots – seen around the world in recent years could become a more common occurrence by 2050 if steps aren’t taken now,” according to a Christian Science Monitor editorial examining the recent International Food Policy Research Institute report. “The good news is that the suffering caused by climate change can be avoided if nations take action now. They can afford an extra $7 billion per year [the amount suggested in the report]. But the problem could easily slip to the bottom of the priority list given the far-off nature of the threat. Political will, above all, is required,” the editorial concludes (9/30).

The KFF Daily Global Health Policy Report summarized news and information on global health policy from hundreds of sources, from May 2009 through December 2020. All summaries are archived and available via search.

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