The United States has approved an emergency humanitarian waiver allowing continued access to HIV treatment funded by the U.S.
Patients and health care advocates said the abrupt decision to halt U.S. funding for a lifesaving H.I.V. program led to ...
The Trump administration has made some concessions to the halt placed on distributions of global HIV treatments via ...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has expressed deep concern about the funding pause for HIV programmes in low- and ...
The Democratic Alliance and Build One South Africa have expressed concerns over the US government's decision to suspend ...
PEPFAR partners describe a whiplash-inducing stop-work order, which has left them with many questions — including whether ...
The Trump administration on January 24 halted disbursement of funds to programmes to treat HIV, malaria and other diseases in ...
PEPFAR, a $7.5 billion initiative established in 2003, has provided HIV care to millions worldwide. The recent suspension of the program raised concerns about the potential loss of access to HIV ...
The State Department issued a waiver for lifesaving aid, but HIV clinics remain shut and uncertainty lingers over the future ...
The United States Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, has approved an "Emergency Humanitarian Waiver" allowing continued access to US-funded HIV treatment across 55 countries.
The President’s Emergency Program for AIDS Relief is in danger of shuttering. The decision could kill hundreds of thousands of people and kickstart an epidemic.
A stop in all of PEPFAR’s work shuttered clinics this week. Then, a new exemption for “life-saving” treatment left ...