Fact Sheet: 2017 Children and AIDS
As the number of people accessing life-saving drugs for HIV has risen, there has been an increasing sense that the end of AIDS was near. But for children and adolescents, the situation remains grave.
BRIEF: UNICEF's Global HIV Response
UNICEF’s Global HIV Response 2017–2021 Addressing the global HIV epidemic among pregnant women, mothers, children and adolescents
Count Me In
A documentation of case studies from Indonesia, Pakistan and Vietnam on Young Key Population involvement in the Global Fund processes
UNICEF’s Vision for the Global HIV Response 2018 – 2021
UNICEF has long been at the heart of global efforts to put the HIV epidemic into an irreversible and rapid retreat. Under the Strategic Plan for 2018–2021, UNICEF will continue to align its HIV-related commitments to global goals and targets detailed in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; the Political Declaration agreed to at the June 2016 United Nations High Level Meeting on Ending AIDS; the Fast Track Strategy to End AIDS developed and championed by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS); the United Nations Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health 2016–2030; the ‘Start Free, Stay Free, AIDS Free’ Framework for Ending AIDS in Children, Adolescent Girls; and the All In Framework to end AIDS in Adolescents and Young Women by 2020 that emerged following the success of the Global Plan Towards the Elimination of New Infections Among Children by 2015 and Keeping their Mothers Alive (Global Plan).
All In to End the Adolescent AIDS Epidemic: A Progress Report
The purpose of the report is to showcase the significant contributions of many partners to research, innovations, community mobilization, programmes and policy actions aimed at ending the AIDS epidemic in adolescents in support of the ALL IN! agenda.
Talking about HIV can be the beginning of an AIDS-free generation in Lesotho where one in four people are living with HIV. Many people do not know their status, but early testing and treatment can be the difference between life and death.
Martha, 19, was born with HIV. Here, she tells us the story of her marriage, the birth of her baby and how she is part of Malawi's AIDS-free generation.
Siyanda Mohutsiwa, a young Botswana-based writer obsessed with Africa and the internet, gives us her take on her recent reports on HIV and AIDS among adolescents with UNICEF.