Africa: A New African HIV Control Working Group to Propel African Voices in the Global HIV Response

HIV is no longer the death sentence it used to be. Today, more people living with HIV have access to life-saving treatment.
opinion

The response to the HIV epidemic is more than 40 years old. The African continent has been the most affected with millions of people over the years having battled HIV-associated opportunistic infections and subsequent deaths, leaving millions of orphans and decimated communities and economies. By 1996, the scientific evidence was clear - combination highly active antiretroviral therapy (ART) prolonged and improved the quality of life of people living with HIV (PLWH).

In 1998, the US Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) released its first HIV treatment guidelines, changing the course of the HIV epidemic, but only for communities with access to ART. Despite these advances, Africans were amongst the last to benefit from lifesaving ART, largely because of cost and many people in the north believing that it was not possible for African health systems to provide drugs to their people - as reported in the New York Times in 2001.

Shouldering the HIV burden

According to UNAIDS, of the 39 million people estimated to be living with HIV globally, 20.8 million live in eastern and southern Africa with a further 4.8 million in western and central Africa. This means that more than 65% of the global burden is in sub-Saharan Africa. Similarly, of the 1.3 million new HIV infections in 2022, UNAIDS reports that 660 000 were in countries in sub-Saharan Africa. With respect to treatment, 83% of PLWH in eastern and southern Africa are on ART, 78% in western and central Africa but only 50% of those in the Middle East and North Africa (compared to 76% globally). In addition, the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa is heterogenous when compared to the epidemic in the US or Europe. HIV remains more prevalent amongst women than men, with heterosexual rather than homosexual encounters accounting for majority of HIV transmission, with higher rates of HIV and risk of new infections amongst female sex workers and their clients, and ongoing HIV transmission amongst pregnant and breastfeeding women living with HIV to their children.

A disenfranchised global south

Given that the challenges presented by the evolving HIV epidemic and the public health response are mostly experienced in Africa, it has recently been asked why are most of the conferences on HIV held in the north. This approach prioritises researchers and other stakeholders from the north attending and presenting their research, most of which is conducted in Africa. This disenfranchises global south researchers and stakeholders who have limited funding and enormous visa entry challenges with attending such conferences and participating in discussions and debates.

Good to see IAS learn from the Montréal debacle that saw many activists and leaders from the Global South excluded from the AIDS 2022 conference due to visa issues.

Continental rotation of conferences is at least one positive step to addressing this... https://t.co/dPp3sWhvuJ

-- Jake Atkinson (@JacobLAtkinson) February 14, 2023

An African-led HIV response

To address these inequities and propel African voices and perspectives in the next phase of the HIV response in Africa, a group of Africans approached the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to fund the establishment of an African-led HIV control working group (HCWG) of experts from the continent to come together as a working group to develop consensus perspectives on the definition of long-term sustained control of HIV and prioritise the systems and capabilities to achieve it. The HCWG is currently co-chaired by Dr Izukanji Sikazwe and Dr Yogan Pillay. Its members have expertise in a wide range of topics from epidemiology, clinical aspects of HIV, financing, and economics, lived experiences with HIV, advocates, and policy makers.

The vision of the HCWG is an "African-led response for long-term HIV control on the continent" and its mission is "finding sustainable solutions to end HIV as a public health threat in Africa led by African stakeholders, in partnership and solidarity with the global community".

The specific objectives of the project are to establish an HIV Control Working Group (HCWG) comprising African experts and to, through this, develop consensus perspectives on the definition of long-term sustained HIV control, the systems and capabilities required to achieve it, and the long-term sustainability of the HIV response by Africans. It also aims to offer recommendations to funders, African governments, and implementing partners.

The intended outcomes of this work include an effective African-led HCWG that contributes to the acceleration and coordination of African stakeholders' HIV response with a consolidated and coherent approach; a framework for reducing HIV as a public health threat and reprioritisation of HIV prevention; a platform to promote African governments' ownership of the HIV response; recommendations that impact policy formulation, HIV control, and sustainability.

Independent and collaborative

The working group will be independent and not aligned with any funder, government, or institution, and will represent African voices. Apart from its independence, its membership, which is representative of expert African technocrats and advocates, will work collaboratively with African government leadership, policy bodies, and funders to influence policies and practices toward a sustained response. The working group will proactively engage with a consultive group that is constituted of members drawn from the African Union, WHO, The Global Fund, PEPFAR, Africa CDC, UN Agencies, African Development Bank, funders, and community stakeholders.

The working group was convened for the first time on 10 August. The thematic areas that the HCWG will prioritise are broadly categorised into the following areas: Defining HIV control from an African perspective; governance and leadership to promote country-led HIV responses; HIV prevention; and health systems strengthening, including community systems. This effort will complement other efforts to mobilise African leaders to take greater responsibility for the response to HIV and AIDS, including the recently held meeting of African Ministers of Finance.

*Dr Pillay is the Director of HIV and TB Delivery at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Dr Sikazwe is the CEO of the Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia.

NOTE: The BMGF is mentioned in this article. Spotlight receives funding from the BMGF, but is editorially independent - an independence that the editors guard jealously. Spotlight is a member of the South African Press Council.

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