Open Society Foundations Address Role of Human Rights in "HIV Treatment as Prevention" Efforts

Date:
August 4, 2011

The Open Society Public Health Program and its partners are working to help define the role of human rights, community mobilization, and advocacy for affordable medicines in efforts to scale up early HIV diagnosis and treatment. The Public Health Program has also given a grant to the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition (ITPC) to work on this issue.

With the results of several recent clinical trials, there is now compelling evidence that the use of antiretroviral treatment (ART) not only extends life for people living with HIV, but also prevents HIV from being transmitted—either when used by HIV-positive people to reduce their infectiousness (“treatment as prevention”), or by HIV-negative people as a form of prophylaxis (“pre-exposure prophylaxis”). In the case of treatment as prevention, the prevention benefits are even greater when an HIV-positive person initiates treatment early in his or her infection before symptoms appear, which calls for a massive scale-up of access to treatment.

At the UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS in June 2011, world leaders committed to attain the goal of 15 million people on treatment by 2015 as a critical step towards universal access. These ambitious goals make it all the more important to remove barriers to early diagnosis and treatment of people living with HIV—including barriers related to human rights, such as stigmatization and abuse in health care settings, criminalization and incarceration of marginalized groups, and violence against women. They also underscore the importance of maximizing the use of flexibilities in the international patent regime to ensure access to affordable ART.

The Open Society Public Health Program's work on this issue will be the collaboration of its Access to Essential Medicines Initiative, Accountability and Monitoring in Health Initiative, and Law and Health Initiative.

back to the top of the page
Related Information

Film Screening: They Took My Choice Away
OSI-New York
March 1, 2012
The Open Society Foundations present the New York premiere of "They Took My Choice Away," a short film about forced sterilization in Namibia. The premiere event includes a discussion with filmmaker Bob Sacha.

Salzburg Seminar: Palliative Care for Patients with TB or HIV/TB
Salzburg, Austria
February 26, 2012
The International Palliative Care Initiative of the Open Society Public Health Program will convene a professional seminar focused on providing palliative care for patients with TB or HIV/TB coinfection. The course is recommended for physicians in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union who provide direct care to patients with TB or who play a major role in developing public health policies for the care of patients with TB.

Social Media and Health Care: The Ning Connection
Joyce Ho
February 16, 2012
blog BLOG  
Ning is quickly emerging as a popular social media platform for patient support groups and people living with chronic medical conditions.

Death, Drug Treatment, and Christ's Love
Daniel Wolfe
February 14, 2012
blog BLOG  
A tragedy struck the "Christ is Love" drug treatment center in Peru, where residents trapped behind the facility's locked doors were burned alive. The story is unfortunately one of many tragic accounts from so-called treatment centers that offer harsh discipline and physical abuse in place of medication and counseling.

What You Can’t Say Might Hurt You
Heather Doyle
February 10, 2012
blog BLOG  
Federal courts have repeatedly invalidated the U.S.'s anti-prostitution pledge. Now the Obama administration must decide whether to appeal to the Supreme Court or finally retire this harmful policy.

About  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  Legal  |  Contact


Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative License.
©2012 Open Society Foundations. Some rights reserved.