The 41st meeting of the UNAIDS Programme Coordinating Board (PCB) is taking place in Geneva, Switzerland, from 12 to 14 December.
At the opening, UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé gave an update on the progress made in the AIDS response and outlined the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. He stressed that despite the progress made AIDS is not yet over and outlined the five key challenges that remain unaddressed—reaching the unreached, protecting young women and girls, ensuring that men have access to services, focusing on the regions that are lagging behind and addressing stigma, discrimination and criminalization.
During the opening session, Mr Sidibé also announced that Michel Kazatchkine will be the Special Adviser to UNAIDS on HIV, Tuberculosis and Hepatitis for Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
The thematic segment of the PCB meeting will take place on the last day and will focus on accelerating action to end discrimination in health-care settings. The participants will review the evidence of the effects of discrimination in health-care settings on efforts to reach the global HIV prevention and treatment targets and will identify programmatic actions to end such discrimination.
The 41th meeting of the PCB is being chaired by Ghana, with the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland acting as Vice-Chair and Japan as Rapporteur. Read more via UNAIDS
1 in 4 people living with #HIV have experienced discrimination in health care settings. We will not achieve our vision for health or realize the #globalgoals if we do not confront discrimination #PCB41 pic.twitter.com/14tIX3XSGd
— Michel Sidibé (@MichelSidibe) December 12, 2017
A take home message of @UNAIDS Board meeting:
— Annemarie Hou (@annemarie_hou) December 12, 2017
"Hard to reach populations are not hard to reach, they are easy to ignore," says French NGO Europe and repeated by #PCB41 Chair Minister of Health of #Ghana.
We must continue to seek reform which ensures safe access to services for everyone, including the LGBTI community, sex workers & people who use drugs#PCB41 pic.twitter.com/QPyAAF22yR
— Michel Sidibé (@MichelSidibe) December 12, 2017
.@MichelSidibe: We must take #AIDS out of isolation. We need to actively look at synergies b/w HIV and #UHC agenda, NCDs, cervical #cancer, hepatitis, schistosomiasis and other health programmes, but also #education and broader development activities. #PCB41 #endAIDS #Health4All pic.twitter.com/RJGiO6PshL
— Ani Shakarishvili,MD (@AniShakari) December 12, 2017
Abhina Aher of @AllianceinIndia tells #PCB41 that stigma & discrimination against transgender women & sex-workers has tripled her cost of living and places barriers to healthcare & other essential services @UNAIDS #myrighttohealth #UHCForum2017 pic.twitter.com/KjkRPXlzYy
— kent buse (@kentbuse) December 14, 2017
Nyambe: 'Everyone is a potential prisoner' #humanrights #EndAids #HarmReduction #ZeroDiscrimination https://t.co/BXjzNvxTom
— Rebecca Bosworth (@RebeccaBoswort2) December 11, 2017
We are not dying because of AIDS; we are dying because of stigma, discrimination, criminalisation and the shrinking civil society space that silences our critical role in the response. @adittaslim #PCB41
— NGO PCB (@ngopcb) December 13, 2017
#Australia 🇦🇺applauds efforts of @UNAIDS Joint Programme to advance #zerodiscrimination in #AIDS response and takes opportunity to celebrate recent legislation achieving #marriageequality in the country #PCB41 pic.twitter.com/OtJQfnAF3M
— kent buse (@kentbuse) December 13, 2017
Poor data on how stigma impacts key populations and others left behind creates barriers for #HIV responses @gnpplus announces “Stigma Index 2.0” - a critical participatory monitoring tool for people living with HIV #PCB41 pic.twitter.com/mQWQumq1Kp
— Andy Seale (@dreamingwicked) December 13, 2017