HIV is spread by bodily fluids such as blood, breast milk or semen. It gradually weakens the body’s immune system and makes ...
More than six million people could die from HIV and AIDS in the next four years if U.S. President Donald Trump's ...
NEWS ANALYSIS. Despite the waiver granted by the US, the global system for fighting HIV – which still causes 630,000 deaths a ...
In the series, five members from the Los Angeles' Latino community talk candidly about receiving their HIV-positive diagnoses ...
In Africa, a U.S. funding loss will be critical to HIV programs in countries like Uganda, Mozambique and Tanzania.
The freeze on U.S. foreign aid ordered by President Donald Trump has effectively halted one of the world's most successful ...
Correction: An earlier version of this story said incorrectly that President Donald Trump signed an executive order pausing foreign aid the day after he took office. He signed it the day he took ...
The U.N.'s Angeli Achrekar reports that many clinics have closed, despite exemptions in the policy. She fears mortality will ...
If PEPFAR is not reauthorized for the next four years, and without other resources for the HIV response, there would be 6.3 ...
The United States government has expressed its willingness to continue supporting humanitarian projects under way in Mozambique, including the assistance aimed at fighting against HIV/AIDS. According ...
The Asia Pacific region has the largest HIV epidemic outside of Africa and advocates fear an end to US aid could make matters ...
The United States eventually did, creating PEPFAR, arguably the most successful foreign aid program in history. HIV, which causes AIDS, is now manageable, though there is still no cure.