Kulohoma Benard W, Wesonga Colette A
Ortholog, Nairobi, Kenya.
Front Public Health. 2025 Sep 1;13:1658229. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1658229. eCollection 2025.
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) faces a critical HIV financing crisis that threatens the 2030 goal of ending HIV as a public health threat. Despite accounting for 77% of weekly global new HIV infections, occurring among adolescent girls and young women, only 1% of annual global health spending is available for SSA, where 16% of the world's population resides. This disparity undermines progress toward the UNAIDS 95-95-95targets for HIV diagnosis, treatment access, and viral suppression. Multiple converging health financing gaps exacerbate this crisis: Domestic resource mobilization remains inadequate, with only three African countries meeting the Abuja Declaration's 15% health budget allocation target. Official development assistance (ODA) has declined by 70%, while reduced PEPFAR funding threatens treatment access for over 222,000 requiring daily treatment across seven high-burden countries. Health insurance coverage remains minimal, forcing up to 70% out-of-pocket health spending in some countries. Additionally, donor-driven vertical programs have fragmented health systems, while Africa produces only 3% of global pharmaceuticals despite bearing 23% of disease burden. These financing challenges extend beyond the HIV response, potentially causing 10.6 million additional tuberculosis cases and 2.2 million deaths during 2025-2030. Addressing this crisis requires coordinated action including strengthened domestic resource mobilization, innovative financing mechanisms, regional manufacturing capacity, and integrated health system governance. Urgent intervention is necessary to preserve decades of HIV prevention and treatment progress, particularly affecting the most vulnerable populations.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区(SSA)面临着严重的艾滋病资金危机,这威胁到2030年将艾滋病作为公共卫生威胁消除的目标。尽管该地区占全球每周新增艾滋病感染病例的77%,且感染人群主要是少女和年轻女性,但在占世界人口16%的该地区,可用的年度全球卫生支出仅为1%。这种差距削弱了在实现联合国艾滋病规划署针对艾滋病诊断、治疗可及性和病毒抑制的95-95-95目标方面取得的进展。多个相互交织的卫生资金缺口加剧了这场危机:国内资源调动仍然不足,只有三个非洲国家达到了《阿布贾宣言》规定的15%的卫生预算分配目标。官方发展援助(ODA)下降了70%,而总统紧急艾滋病救援计划(PEPFAR)资金的减少威胁到七个高负担国家中超过22.2万名需要每日治疗的患者的治疗可及性。医疗保险覆盖范围仍然极小,在一些国家,高达70%的医疗费用需自掏腰包。此外,由捐助者驱动的垂直项目使卫生系统碎片化,而非洲尽管承担了23%的疾病负担,却仅生产全球3%的药品。这些资金挑战不仅限于艾滋病应对领域,在2025年至2030年期间可能还会导致新增1060万结核病病例和220万人死亡。应对这场危机需要采取协调行动,包括加强国内资源调动、创新融资机制、提高区域制造能力以及整合卫生系统治理。必须进行紧急干预,以保护数十年来在艾滋病预防和治疗方面取得的进展,尤其是对最脆弱人群的影响。