Consider This from NPR - Can the global HIV/AIDS fight recover from Trump's cuts?
Episode Date: September 12, 2025HIV has been in retreat around the world. Fewer people are dying of the disease.New infections are decreasing. More HIV positive people have access to life saving medicine.Those trend lines have bee...n moving in the right direction for decades. And US investment is one big reason.The Trump Administration dismantled foreign assistance through USAID, it continued PEPFAR — the President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief — but much of the work is either no longer happening or happening at a very reduced capacity.For decades, the United States led global efforts to end HIV/AIDS. That's no longer happening. Where will the trend lines go from here? For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Jeffrey Pierre. You also heard reporting in this episode from NPR’s Gabrielle Emanuel from Zambia.It was edited by Courtney Dorning and Rebecca Davis.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Earlier this year, Susan Hillis got a voice message from Pastor Billions Chondway.
Calvary greetings. Calvary greetings. Dr. Susan, how are you?
Pastor Chondway was at his home in Zambia. Dr. Hillis was at an airport in Thailand
where she had been attending a conference of Christian mission hospitals. She could hear the worry in his
voice. I had tears in my eyes and was choked up. Pastor Chondway was urgently trying to find
HIV medication for a nine-year-old orphan with AIDS.
She has no chance unless someone can get her medicine in the middle of rural Zambia.
Who's going to do that?
I was thinking she's going to die.
For years, the U.S. has funded global efforts to prevent and treat HIV.
When President Trump took office, the new administration stopped most foreign assistance,
including much of the program that serves orphans with AIDS.
That left Pastor Chondway scrambling.
then by chance, it's a miracle.
He found someone who agreed to share their remaining pills with the child.
God save Diana that she doesn't develop symptoms
because the dosage was too much or was less.
Since the start of the year, millions of people have faced situations like this one,
scrambling after the U.S. slashed global HIV prevention and treatment programs.
Now, the U.S. says it will support a new,
new HIV prevention drug that the medical community calls a game changer.
Consider this. For decades, the U.S. led global efforts to end HIV AIDS. Where will the
trend lines go from here? From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro.
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been in retreat around the world. Fewer people are dying of the disease. New infections are
decreasing. More HIV-positive people have access to life-saving medicine. Those trend lines have
been moving in the right direction for decades, and U.S. investment is one big reason. It's less
clear where the trend lines go from here. While the Trump administration dismantled foreign assistance
through USAID, it continued PEPFAR, the president's emergency plan for AIDS relief.
But much of that work is either no longer happening or happening at a very reduced capacity.
And last week, the U.S. said it will invest in a new drug that can prevent HIV with just two injections a year.
So to understand where things stand and where they are going, Emily Bass is here.
She's author of To End a Plague, America's Fight to Defeat AIDS in Africa.
Welcome.
Hi.
Okay, if you could draw a chart showing the trend line since the 90s on HIV-Divs,
transmission and treatment. Where do things stand right now and where do they need to get to eradicate
HIV? Well, let's talk about where they stood in December of 2024, because that's what we can
really talk about with confidence, as I'll explain in a little bit. But in December 2024, on the brink
of the new year, the year we're currently in, we were looking in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa
in particular, which is where PEPFAR has focused its investments. At countries, being
on the path towards or having achieved a set of milestones that were associated with ending HIV as a
public health threat by 2030.
So like the finish line in sight?
Yes, very much so.
So we've seen people fired and rehired.
We've seen grants frozen and unfrozen.
Can you say right now what the U.S. role in global AIDS prevention is and will continue to be, or is it all just totally murky and uncertain?
In the past nine or ten months, the lights have gone out.
We don't know what has happened in the countries where PEPFAR has been supporting programs.
We simply don't know.
The data that would normally have been made available on a quarterly basis have not been made available.
It's very difficult to get a clear picture.
All of the reports from the ground tell the same story of massive disruptions,
particularly in the service delivery approaches.
So the ecosystem within which HIV services are delivered
is not just the clinic and is there a drug on the shelf.
It's how does a person get to the clinic?
Are they greeted there by somebody who is friendly and not judgmental?
Are the drugs delivered to their community?
Is there a peer, someone with their lived experience
who can help them understand the importance of accessing prevention or treatment
and who will follow up with them if they stop accessing.
Okay, so even if the program still exists, its infrastructure has been partially or largely
dismantled.
The data is in some cases non-existent.
And then you have this announcement that the United States is going to support this new
HIV prevention drug, Lena Kappavir, which the medical community calls a breakthrough
and a game changer.
Is that enough to keep the trend lines moving in the right direction?
So absolutely not. It's good news. A couple things about that. It's good news. It is affirmation of a commitment that was actually made in the Biden administration. And it's only a piece of what we could have expected PEPFAR, if we were speaking a year ago, to be doing to create an environment where a drug like Leno Kappavir could be part of a truly game-changing approach to HIV. And I just want to say, when you say the infrastructure isn't there, I think it's really important.
to be clear. The infrastructure is human beings. It's the community. It's the clinic staff. It's the
clinic buildings. All of those things are there. PEPFAR did not have, you know, it's not like McDonald's.
There aren't PEPFAR sort of branded buildings across sub-Saharan Africa. The infrastructure, the human
beings and the clinics and the community connections are all still there, but the people who are being
paid to support the ecosystem have lost their jobs or have been rehired temporarily.
And the clinics are still there, but they're overcrowded and people are now waiting
10 or 12 hours a day to get their drugs or to be told that the nurses are done and they're going
home.
To continue this conversation about Lena Capavir, the U.S. has a plans to focus the rollout
of this new medication on pregnant and breastfeeding women.
They say in plans released last week that they plan to do it without NGOs, without nonprofit
organizations. Is that possible?
Well, there's two things there, right? So let's take them one by one. Prior to 2025,
PEPFAR was an evidence-based, evidence-driven, data-driven program that invested its resources
in the most impacted communities and the communities where there was the most need for HIV
prevention and treatment. Pregnant and breastfeeding women absolutely need access
to pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP, which is what we're talking about with this injectable.
But there are many other communities in all of these countries who are not pregnant, who are not breastfeeding, who are at tremendous risk of HIV.
The Trump administration has been talking about transition plans and reducing global reliance on the U.S.
Can other countries step in to fill the gap that the U.S. is leaving?
You know, transition planning was underway before all of these changes.
occurred. When we were talking about ending HIV as a public health threat as 2030, that was the
horizon line for moving countries first towards control of their HIV epidemics and then to a
maintenance phase where they would be able to increasingly manage that continuation of HIV in the,
in the community, in the country, but with their own resources and perhaps with additional
overseas development aid, but in different ways or diminished levels. That's an off ramp. What we
did is take the car off the off ramp, if you will, and just drive it into a wall, right? So, sure,
transition is possible. It's less possible now than it was at the end of 2024.
So where do you think the trend lines are going to go in the next few years?
I think the trend lines are already going in terrible directions, Ari. I think the trend lines are
going in the direction of new HIV infections, including for infants and newborns.
I know this from my own work.
I was in Uganda and Tanzania in the first hundred days after the freeze, where drug supply
was incredibly unstable in some contexts.
And I spoke to clinic directors who had seen 25% of their pregnant women give birth to babies
with HIV.
Which is preventable.
Which is preventable, and they had had none for years prior.
So we're going to see new infections, but we're also going to see people with interruptions
in their treatment.
people with HIV that I've spoken to are skipping doses.
They're hoarding their medication.
They're seeing the news.
They're anticipating a point where they won't have medications anymore.
Or they can't wait 12 hours at a clinic.
Or the community's support that brought the drugs to their community is no longer there.
When people disengage from care, they get ill.
And unfortunately, the way that the data blackout has happened,
some of this is already happening and we can't tell the story of it yet.
Emily Bass is author of the book, To End a Plague, America's Fight to Defeat AIDS in Africa.
And she's also co-author of a Physicians for Human Rights Report this month on the impacts of the foreign aid transitions in Uganda and Tanzania.
Thank you so much for speaking with us.
Thank you.
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You heard reporting in this episode from Zambia by NPR's Gabriela Emmanuel.
The episode was produced by Jeffrey Pierre.
It was edited by Courtney Dorney and Rebecca Davis.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yen again.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Ari Shapiro.