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Today is WORLD AIDS Day


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EQUALIZE - WORLD AIDS DAY 2022


The inequalities perpetuating the AIDS pandemic are not inevitable; we can tackle them. This World AIDS Day, 1 December, UNAIDS urges each of us to address the inequalities holding back progress in ending AIDS.


The “Equalize” slogan is a call to action. It is a prompt for all of us to work for the proven practical actions needed to address inequalities and help end AIDS. These include:


  • Increase the availability, quality and suitability of services, for HIV treatment, testing and prevention, so that everyone is well-served.

  • Reform laws, policies and practices to tackle the stigma and exclusion faced by people living with HIV and by key and marginalised populations so that everyone is shown respect and is welcomed.

  • Ensure the sharing of technology to enable equal access to the best HIV science, between communities and between the Global South and North.

  • Communities will be able to use and adapt the “Equalize” message to highlight the particular inequalities they face and to press for the actions needed to address them. Data from UNAIDS on the global HIV response reveals that during the last two years of COVID-19 and other global crises, progress against the HIV pandemic has faltered, resources have shrunk, and millions of lives are at risk as a result. 


Four decades into the HIV response, inequalities continue to persist for the most basic services like testing, treatment, and condoms, and even more so for new technologies.


Young women in Africa remain disproportionately affected by HIV, while coverage of dedicated programmes for them remains too low. In 19 high-burden countries in Africa, dedicated combination prevention programmes for adolescent girls and young women operate in only 40% of the high HIV incidence locations.


Only a third of people in key populations— including gay men and other men who have sex with men, transgender people, people who use drugs, sex workers, and prisoners—have regular prevention access. Key populations face major legal barriers, including criminalisation, discrimination and stigma.


We have only eight years before the 2030 goal of ending AIDS as a global health threat. Economic, social, cultural and legal inequalities must be addressed as a matter of urgency. In a pandemic, inequalities exacerbate the dangers for everyone. Indeed, the end of AIDS can only be achieved if we tackle the inequalities which drive it. World leaders need to act with bold and accountable leadership. And all of us, everywhere, must do all we can to help tackle inequalities too.


Today, events are taking place across the world. These activities are being led not only by official bodies but also, most importantly, by communities. Through photos and videos shared by groups on social media and aggregated by UNAIDS, people can have a sense of the kaleidoscope of events taking place and be inspired by determination and hope.


“We can end AIDS – if we end the inequalities which perpetuate it. This World AIDS Day, we need everyone to get involved in sharing the message that we will all benefit when we tackle inequalities,” says UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima. “To keep everyone safe, to protect everyone’s health, we need to Equalize.”




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