HIV/AIDS & Infectious Diseases

More from the Series

Blog Post
New Data, Same Story: Disease Still Concentrated in Middle-Income Countries
September 09, 2013
This is a joint post with Yuna Sakuma. The majority of the world’s sick live in middle-income countries (MIC) – mainly Pakistan, India, Nigeria, China and Indonesia (or PINCI), according to new data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washing...
Blog Post
When and How Much TasP Is Value for Money?
January 11, 2013
This is a joint post with Mead Over and Denizhan Duran. In mid-2011, one of the biggest developments in HIV/AIDS research took place. The HPTN 052 study found that early antiretroviral therapy treatment could reduce HIV transmission by 96% in couples where one partner is HIV positive and the ...
Blog Post
World AIDS Day 2012: Getting to the Beginning of the End
November 29, 2012
Around this time last year, world leaders called for “the beginning of the end of AIDS” and an “AIDS-free generation”, and committed to reaching the ambitious disease-specific targets for HIV/AIDS: the virtual elimination of mother-to-child transmission; 15 million people on ...
Blog Post
Should UNITAID Rethink Its Raison d’Être?
September 17, 2012
UNITAID: maybe you’ve heard of it, or maybe not. Launched in 2006, UNITAID has lived in the shadow of its older and bigger global-health siblings (the Global Fund, GAVI, and PEPFAR, to name a few). Perhaps due to its relative obscurity and late entry to a crowded global-health field, UNITAID has pro...
Blog Post
Ethiopia’s AIDS Spending Cliff
September 11, 2012
There’s an AIDS spending cliff in Ethiopia and the government is already in free fall. Next year, Ethiopia will experience a 79% reduction in US HIV financing from PEPFAR. The announcement of these cuts came with an explanation that PEPFAR was “free(ing) up resources by reducing programs in lower HI...