AIDS 2012: In a watershed year, breakthroughs await

The conference returns to Washington in a watershed year. AIDS remains the greatest infectious disease challenge of our age: more than 65 million people infected and 30 million deaths since the epidemic began, and roughly three million new infections and two million deaths a year.

These are grim statistics, but they belie the incredible progress made. When we met at the 1987 AIDS conference, the world had few tools to prevent deadly infections and no drugs to commute slow, agonizing, wasting death. Today, there is an expanding armory of proven prevention tools; new HIV infections have been reduced in more than 33 countries; and there are more drugs to treat HIV than for every retrovirus in history combined. Annual treatment costs have been reduced from as much as $20,000 to as little as $200, and AIDS drugs have been delivered to more than six million people worldwide in the largest-ever expansion of lifesaving treatment.

As the pace of scientific progress accelerates, even greater breakthroughs await us.

Nowhere is this amazing progress more evident than in Africa. At its peak in Eastern and Southern Africa, AIDS was responsible for 50’€“70% of hospital bed occupancy and two-thirds of all adult deaths. Let each of us simply try to imagine experiencing this in our own neighborhoods. In my country, Zimbabwe, hospitals overflowed with emaciated, dying people, nurses and doctors were undertakers, hospitals were hospices, and an entire society’€™s social life rotated from hospital beds to funeral gravesides. Coffin-making was the fastest growing business, lining miles of roads to overcrowded cemeteries.

Today, Africa boasts seven of the 10 fastest growing economies. Let’€™s not underestimate how much successful AIDS responses have contributed to the continent’€™s regeneration. Major behavior change and the amazing expansion of life-giving AIDS treatment breathed life and hope into a dying continent.

And so it is fitting that we meet 25 years later in Washington to honor achievements borne of improbable partnerships: between the activists and scientists who forged the global AIDS response; and the local communities and taxpayers who mounted the world’€™s largest global health initiative. How fitting that we can thank U.S. taxpayers for their generosity in their own capital.

We meet at an inflection point, poised between hope and fear: hope that we may transform progress made into an end to AIDS; and fear that our successes have made AIDS less visible and less urgent and that we may falter before the headwinds of competing priorities and darkening global economic clouds. When we succeed, we’€™ll end a scourge and create greater space and resources for other pressing global challenges.

AIDS shines a light on the worst and best in us. When we respond with superstition, prejudice or pettiness, we are at our worst. When we respond with reason, science, public health principles, compassion, and the conviction that diversity and each individual matters, we are at our best. When we measure ourselves against these principles, it is clear how much progress we have truly made.

At its best, scientific and social progress against AIDS exemplifies how much more intelligent we’€™ve become as a species. It exemplifies the unprecedented progress we have made in recent decades against poverty, ignorance, and disease. For all the challenges we face, there has never been a better time to be alive. Let this conference show the world that we are intelligent, optimistic, bold, and resolute enough to finish the job.

*David Wilson is the World Bank’s Global AIDS Program Director and was previously the Bank’s Lead HIV Specialist. His work on HIV/AIDS spans almost 25 years. During his career he has worked as a scientist and program manager in more than 50 countries and has published approximately 100 scientific papers.

Source: http://blog.aids2012.org/post/AIDS-2012-In-a-Watershed-Year-Breakthroughs-Await.aspx

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