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World AIDS Day, commemorated annually on December 1, serves as a poignant reminder of the ongoing fight against HIV/AIDS. In 2024, the theme “Take the Rights Path: My Health, My Right!” emphasizes the urgent need to protect human rights to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030. The campaign, spearheaded by UNAIDS and WHO, underscores that human rights are not only fundamental but essential for effective HIV prevention, treatment, and care.
Human Rights at the Core of Ending AIDS
Despite significant progress in the global HIV response, human rights violations continue to obstruct efforts to eradicate AIDS. As of 2023, an estimated 39.9 million people were living with HIV, and 630,000 succumbed to AIDS-related illnesses. Of particular concern is the staggering statistic that 1.3 million people acquired HIV in 2023 alone. These figures highlight the urgent need for a rights-based approach to address gaps in access to healthcare, education, and legal protections.
UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima stresses that “When girls are denied education or when people face criminalization for who they are, they are blocked from accessing life-saving HIV services.” The ongoing criminalization of same-sex relationships in 63 countries illustrates how punitive laws hinder progress. HIV prevalence among gay men is five times higher in countries where such relationships are criminalized, underscoring the critical link between legal protections and public health outcomes.
Gender Equality and the Fight Against AIDS
Gender inequality remains a significant barrier in the global HIV response. In 2023, 570 young women and girls aged 15 to 24 acquired HIV every day, particularly in eastern and southern Africa, where they are three times more likely to be living with HIV than their male counterparts. Addressing gender-based violence, ensuring access to education, and empowering young women with the tools to protect their health are essential steps toward ending the epidemic.
Activist Nomonde Ngema, 21, highlights the need for urgent action: “No girl should be denied the education and information she needs to stay safe. Discrimination and violence against girls must be tackled as a human rights and health emergency.”
Tackling Stigma and Discrimination
Stigma and discrimination remain formidable obstacles to achieving universal HIV care. People living with HIV often face social exclusion, which deters them from seeking the care they need. UNAIDS emphasizes that protecting human rights is key to dismantling these barriers and ensuring that everyone has access to quality healthcare, regardless of their background or HIV status.
Elton John, contributing to the UNAIDS report, eloquently states, “Science, medicine, and technology may be the ‘what’ in ending AIDS, but inclusion, empathy, and compassion are the ‘how’.”
The Role of Innovation in the Fight Against AIDS
Scientific advancements, such as long-acting antiretroviral therapies, offer hope in the fight against AIDS. These treatments, which require fewer doses per year, could revolutionize HIV care. However, equitable access to these medical innovations is crucial. Alexandra Calmy, HIV lead at the University Hospitals of Geneva, warns, “Medical tools that save lives cannot be treated merely as commodities.”
Achieving global access to life-saving treatments requires a human rights-based approach to ensure affordability and availability worldwide. Early diagnosis and consistent antiretroviral therapy can enable people living with HIV to lead long, healthy lives and eliminate the risk of transmission.
Call to Action: Take the Rights Path
The message of World AIDS Day 2024 is clear: ending AIDS depends on upholding human rights. Leaders must prioritize legal reforms that protect marginalized communities, dismantle discriminatory laws, and promote gender equality. The global community is called upon to champion health equity, ensuring that everyone, everywhere, has the right to quality healthcare services.
As Irish President Michael D. Higgins writes, “Fulfilling the pledge to end AIDS as a public health threat is a political and financial choice. The time to choose the correct path is long overdue.”
World AIDS Day 2024 is more than a moment—it’s a movement. By choosing the rights path, the world can achieve the ambitious goal of ending AIDS by 2030. This requires bold leadership, inclusive policies, and a commitment to human rights. Together, we can create a future where health is a right for all, and AIDS is a chapter in history, not a present-day crisis.
Related article: Understanding HIV/AIDS: Symptoms, Causes, and Prevention