Revised HIV/AIDS Strategy for WHO African Region Unveiled

Revised HIV/AIDS Strategy for WHO African Region Unveiled

Luanda, 20 November 2012  -- The World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Africa today presented an updated Regional HIV/AIDS Strategy  to the Sixty-second session of the WHO Regional Committee for Africa currently taking place in Luanda, Angola. The strategy provides directions for implementing the WHO Global Health Sector Strategy (GHSS) adopted by the World Health Assembly in May 2011, taking into account key regional specificities.  

According to the WHO Regional Director, Dr Luis Sambo, this strategy shares the vision of the GHSS, 2011 – 2015, which is ‘Zero new HIV infections, zero HIV-related deaths and zero discrimination in a world where people living with HIV/AIDS are able to live long, healthy lives. It defines the health sector’s response to HIV/AIDS, with a stronger focus on the needs of women, girls and other key populations. The strategy proposes eight HIV/AIDS priority interventions and five specific actions to strengthen the capacity of health systems to deliver HIV/AIDS and services.

Among the priority interventions is combination prevention which uses a set of mutually reinforcing interventions (behavioural, biomedical and structural HIV prevention) to address the risks of HIV transmission and acquisition as thoroughly and strategically as possible.

Other interventions are improved and greater access to varied testing and counseling services, as well as to HIV treatment and care for children, adolescents and adults; reduction of co-infections and deaths among people living with HIV, and strengthening of tuberculosis (TB) and HIV collaborative activities

The rest are the provision of comprehensive care and support for people living with HIV, with com-munity participation and the provision of comprehensive range of HIV/AIDS interventions to meet the needs of key population underserved by current HIV/AIDS programs.

The five actions outlined in the strategy include strengthening the leadership and stewardship role of government and strengthening human resources for health, particularly ensuring the availability of competent personnel in the right numbers and mix. Others are laboratory capacity strengthening and the reinforcement of the procurement and supply management systems; and the inclusion of gender and human rights issues in the design, delivery and management of health services, and the strengthening of strategic information systems.

According to WHO, HIV/AIDS remains a long-term development challenge in the African Region which bears 69% of the global burden and has accounted for 67% of the world’s AIDS related deaths.  
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For more information, please contact:

Dr Emil Asamoah-Odei,  asamoahe [at] afro.who.int (asamoahe[at]afro[dot]who[dot]int); tel: +47-241-39329
Samuel T. Ajibola, ajibolas [at] afro.who.int (ajibolas[at]afro[dot]who[dot]int); tel: +47-241-39378
C. Boakye-Agyemang, boakyec [at] afro.who.int (boakyec[at]afro[dot]who[dot]int); tel: +472 413 9420; tel (Angola) + 244 943801810