Introduction

But it needn’t be this way.
Medicines, known as antiretroviral drugs, have transformed HIV from the death sentence it was in the 1980s into a treatable condition. In rich countries these medicines enable people with HIV to live healthy, productive lives. However, for most people in poor countries they remain out of reach.


As a result, in some of the countries worst affected by HIV and AIDS, hundreds of people are dying each day. The HIV and AIDS pandemic is sweeping away teachers, nurses, farmers, mothers and fathers. This leaves a country locked into a cycle of poverty.

ActionAid believes that all people living with HIV and AIDS have a right to life and dignity.

We work in partnership with poor and excluded people at the local, national and international level to defend this right.

The effects of the AIDS crisis are felt most sharply by women. In Southern Africa almost 60% of those living with HIV are women, and the numbers are growing.

A female face
Poor women who become HIV positive are more likely to face violence and discrimination. Women and girls also shoulder the burden of caring for relatives suffering with AIDS-related illnesses and for looking after children whose parents have been lost to the pandemic.

This is why ActionAid has launched the Invisible Women Campaign

 

photo : ©ActionAid/ Gideon Mendel

Fact file

Nearly 2/3 of all people living with HIV are in Africa 

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