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    At Vatican meeting, HIV advocates vow to fight past USAID setbacks

    Players in the global response to pediatric HIV and tuberculosis used a meeting last week to commit to continue services despite the U.S. foreign aid freeze.

    By Andrew Green // 13 February 2025

    In 2010, 20,000 newborns were infected with HIV in Uganda. By 2022, that number had dropped to 5,900, thanks to a targeted effort to identify HIV-positive pregnant women and get them on treatment so they would not transmit the virus.

    That drop was only possible thanks to funding from the U.S. government, through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR. Those funds were part of the $5 billion PEFPAR had invested in HIV prevention and treatment services in Uganda by 2023, the program’s 20th anniversary.

    Now Regina Kamoga is worried those efforts might be completely undermined by the U.S. government’s stop-work order pausing any initiatives funded by American aid dollars, including most PEPFAR-supported programs.

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    More reading:

    ► Scoop: USAID Kenya partner has ‘no funds' to carry out PEPFAR waiver

    ► Where is the political demand to eliminate pediatric HIV/AIDS? (Pro)

    ► Exclusive: Some PEPFAR programs get waiver to restart operations

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    • United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
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    About the author

    • Andrew Green

      Andrew Green@_andrew_green

      Andrew Green, a 2025 Alicia Patterson Fellow, works as a contributing reporter for Devex from Berlin.

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