Video Player is loading.
Advertisement
Current Time 0:00
Duration -:-
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time -:-
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
        HIV Antiviral Injection UNITAID 18 March 2022
        /
        3:45
        /
        MP4
        /
        276.5 MB

        Edited News | WHO

        HIV Antiviral Injection UNITAID 18 March 2022

        Gamechanger HIV injection rolls out in South Africa and Brazil

        The first injection to offer long-lasting protection against HIV is being rolled out in South Africa and Brazil, as an alternative to daily medication.

        UN agency UNITAID announced the groundbreaking development on Friday, which it is hoped will boost HIV prevention worldwide.

        Developed by ViiV (pronounced VEEV) Healthcare and approved by the US health authority, the injection offers two months of protection against HIV. Its active ingredient is cabotegravir.

        Like other HIV treatments, the anti-retroviral medication works by stopping the virus from replicating in the body, effectively reducing the viral load.

        Although existing oral medication – known as “oral pre-exposure prophylaxis”, or oral PrEP - can prevent HIV in 99 per cent of cases, uptake has been slow and targets to reduce new infections have been missed.

        The reasons for this include that people with HIV fear stigma, discrimination or intimate partner violence if they take the pill every day, said UNITAID spokesperson Herve Verhoosel.

        “Long-acting PrEP could have a game-changing impact, improving choice and making HIV prevention a more viable option for more people,” Mr. Verhoosel told journalists in Geneva.

        But he cautioned that the high cost of the injection – believed to be around $20,000 a year for wealthy nations – would be prohibitive elsewhere, so “adequate and affordable supply must be ensured so people everywhere can benefit without delay”.

        In Brazil, UNITAID is supporting long-acting cabotegravir injections among transgender communities – 30 per cent of whom live with HIV - and men who have sex with men (18 per cent).

        In South Africa, the target population is adolescent girls and young women, who are infected “at a disproportionately high rate”, the UN agency said.

        “In sub-Saharan Africa, six in seven new HIV infections in adolescents occur among girls, and young women are twice as likely to be living with HIV as their male peers,” it noted.

        In a related development on Friday, UNAIDS congratulated Zimbabwe for decriminalizing HIV transmission.

        “Public health goals are not served by denying people their individual rights and I commend Zimbabwe for taking this hugely important step,” said UNAIDS Executive Director, Winnie Byanyima. “This decision strengthens the HIV response in Zimbabwe by reducing the stigma and discrimination that too often prevents vulnerable groups of people from receiving HIV prevention, care and treatment services.”

        Ms. Byanyima’s comments followed the Zimbabwean Parliament’s decision to repeal section 79 of the Criminal Law Code on HIV transmission.

        In its place President Emmerson Mnangagwa is expected to sign into law a new marriage bill adopted by Parliament.

        According to UNAIDS, Zimbabwe has made great progress in the response to HIV over the past decade.

        It is estimated that 1.2 million of the 1.3 million people living with HIV in the country are now on life-saving medicines. AIDS-related deaths have decreased by 63 per cent since 2010, with new HIV infections down by 66 per cent over the same period.

        End

        Similar Stories

        Gaza humanitarian update - OCHA, UNRWA

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OCHA , UNRWA

        Gaza humanitarian update - OCHA, UNRWA ENG FRA

        As a controversial United States and Israel-backed aid distribution plan gets underway in Gaza, the UN called on Tuesday for an “immediate surge” of its own pre-positioned supplies to help prevent starvation.

        Uganda UN Human Rights Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani  urges president to reject bill allowing trials of civilians in military courts

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OHCHR

        Uganda UN Human Rights Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani urges president to reject bill allowing trials of civilians in military courts ENG FRA

        UN Human Rights Office Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani today urged Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni to reject a bill that was recently endorsed by parliament allowing trials of civilians in military courts. The Uganda People’s Defence Forces Amendment Bill 2025, which was passed on 20 May and now awaits presidential signature to become law, among others broadens the jurisdiction of military courts, authorising them to try a wide range of offences against civilians.

        UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Seif Magango: South Sudan: UN human rights chief decries escalating hostilities, arbitrary arrests and hate speech

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OHCHR

        UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Seif Magango: South Sudan: UN human rights chief decries escalating hostilities, arbitrary arrests and hate speech ENG FRA

        UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Seif Magango today warned of a further deterioration in the human rights situation in South Sudan at the bi-weekly briefing in Geneva.

        Syria humanitarian update OCHA - WHO 23 May 2025

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OCHA , WHO

        Syria humanitarian update OCHA - WHO 23 May 2025 ENG FRA

        Syria: ‘Staggering’ needs amid insecurity, health care crisis  - UN humanitarians

        Millions of people in Syria continue to face mortal danger from unexploded munitions, disease and malnutrition and urgent support is required, UN humanitarians said on Friday.

        Gaza health update - UNRWA - OCHA - WHO

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | UNRWA , OCHA , WHO

        Gaza health update - UNRWA - OCHA - WHO ENG FRA

        UN life-saving aid allowed to trickle into Gaza as civilian needs mount

        Amid calls for more humanitarian trucks to enter the food and medicine-deprived Palestinian enclave of Gaza, UN humanitarians have received permission from Israel for “around 100” more aid trucks to cross into the Strip after only five were let in yesterday,  But the scale of relief efforts allowed remains entirely insufficient to meet the urgent needs of people there, humanitarian workers say.

        Press vests becoming a target - war reporter Christina Assi

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News

        Press vests becoming a target - war reporter Christina Assi ENG FRA

        A war reporter from Lebanon who lost a limb in the line of duty is calling for an end to impunity for attacks against journalists.

        ITU 160th Anniversary - 17 May 2025

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | ITU

        ITU 160th Anniversary - 17 May 2025 ENG FRA

        The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) commemorated 160 years dedicated to connecting the world on Saturday, 17 May in Geneva, Switzerland, during the annual World Telecommunication and Information Society Day.

        Gaza humanitarian update – WHO, OCHA 16 May 2025

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | WHO , OCHA

        Gaza humanitarian update – WHO, OCHA 16 May 2025 ENG FRA

        Gazans ‘in terror’ after another night of deadly strikes and siege

        Amid reports that Israeli strikes across Gaza into Friday killed at least 64 people, aid teams once again pushed back strongly at allegations that aid is being diverted to Hamas and pleaded for the blockade to end.

        UN Human Rights raises human rights concerns about deportations from the United States of America

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG

        UN Human Rights raises human rights concerns about deportations from the United States of America ENG FRA

        Deportations over recent months of large numbers of non-nationals from the United States of America, especially to countries other than those of their origin, raise a number of human rights concerns, the UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk warned on Tuesday.   

        Gaza health update - WHO

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | WHO

        Gaza health update - WHO ENG FRA

        Gaza: Over 50 child malnutrition deaths amid aid blockade; entire generation will be ‘permanently affected’ - WHO

        In the aid desert of Gaza, malnourished children are dying while survivors can expect a lifetime of dire health problems, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.

        Gaza aid update - UNICEF, UNRWA, WHO 09 May 2025

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | WHO , UNICEF , UNRWA

        Gaza aid update - UNICEF, UNRWA, WHO 09 May 2025 ENG FRA

        Israel’s aid plan will force Gaza families to choose ‘between displacement and death’ – UN humanitarians

        Israel’s plan to take control of relief assistance in Gaza risks increasing the suffering of families already exhausted by 18 months of war by putting their lives in danger and inciting more displacement, using aid as “bait”, UN humanitarians said on Friday.

        Gaza humanitarian blockade  OCHA - WHO

        1

        1

        1

        Edited News | OCHA , WHO

        Gaza humanitarian blockade OCHA - WHO ENG FRA

        UN Humanitarians reject Israeli plan to take over aid delivery

        The reported Israeli proposal to deliver humanitarian supplies through hubs controlled by the military would be a breach of the core principles of neutral, impartial and independent aid delivery, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, said on Tuesday.