UN and Kenya team up to end AIDS epidemic by 2030

NEW YORK, NY – The United Nations program that works to combat HIV/AIDS is working with the Government of Kenya in a bid to end the AIDS epidemic in the country by 2030, through the creation of a new

NEW YORK, NY – The United Nations program that works to combat HIV/AIDS is working with the Government of Kenya in a bid to end the AIDS epidemic in the country by 2030, through the creation of a new data-collecting tool to track progress in current HIV programming.

The new โ€œKenya HIV Situation Roomโ€ will collect data on logistics and service delivery to produce a comprehensive understanding of the scope of the epidemic, according to an announcement by the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) today.

โ€œHigh velocity data is critical for insights into a more effective and efficient response to HIV,โ€ said UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibรฉ.

โ€œPresident [Uhuru] Kenyatta’s leadership will help Africa accelerate progress towards ending the AIDS epidemic as part of the Sustainable Development Goals,โ€ he added, referring to the new global agenda that world leaders are expected to adopt next week in New York.

The Situation Room, developed by the National AIDS Control Council and the Kenyan Ministry of Health in collaboration with UNAIDS, with support from the Government of Japan, brings together data from four separate sources: the Kenya Medical Supply Agency; Kenya’s HIV estimates; the District Health Information System; and data from the National AIDS Control Council on programme implementers and service delivery.

Current data shows that there are approximately 800,000 people receiving treatment for HIV/AIDS in Kenya. New HIV infections in the country have fallen by 77 percent from their peak in 1993, and AIDS-related deaths have been reduced by 74 percent from their peak in 2003, as access to antiretroviral treatment was scaled up.

In 2014, around 57 percent of adults living with HIV in Kenya had access to lifesaving medicines, while 67 percent of pregnant women living with HIV had access to medicine to prevent transmission of the virus to their children. New HIV infections in children, as a result, have dropped by 70 percent since their peak in 1994.

President Kenyatta reported progress made in reaching adolescents with HIV services, and announced that Kenya would be launching a new campaign against stigma and discrimination.

โ€œOur Constitution guarantees every child a right to education, the highest available standard of health and protection from all forms of discrimination,โ€ he stated. โ€œWe cannot change anyone’s HIV status but we can change our attitude. Let us stop stigma and let us stop it right now.โ€

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Linda Hohnholz

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