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HIV/AIDS

You are viewing all content tagged HIV/AIDS.  You can also read an overview of MSF's work with HIV/AIDS.

Field News | November 20, 2012

Trying Out New Approaches to HIV Treatment

Micaela Serafini, MSF medical referent, discusses MSF’s efforts to treat HIV/AIDS in Swaziland.

Press Release | November 5, 2012

Myanmar: Violence and Threats Block Access to Medical Care in Rakhine State

MSF teams in Rakhine State are unable to provide care to many people in need due to ongoing ethnic tensions and threats against MSF staff.

Press Coverage | October 12, 2012

McClatchy: Critics Say Trade Pact Could Hurt Global AIDS Fight

Access to medicines is a crucial issue in private talks over the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the largest trade deal in U.S. history.

Special Report | September 19, 2012

Progress Under Threat: Perspectives on the HIV Treatment Gap

While gains made in the fight against HIV/AIDS in the past decade are encouraging, countries most affected by the pandemic continue to struggle to place enough people on treatment and implement the best science and strategies to fight the disease.

Press Release | September 14, 2012

Global Fund Adopts New Grant Model

The board of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria approved a new funding model, which avoided imposing caps for countries applying for funding. In November, the board will decide on further details pertaining to the new model. 

Press Release | September 3, 2012

Bayer Attempting To Block Affordable Patented Drugs In India

German pharmaceutical company Bayer is challenging an intellectual property decision in India that allowed more affordable generic drugs to be produced in the interests of public health.

Press Coverage | August 21, 2012

Wall Street Journal: Novartis Fights India For Cancer Pill Patent

Novartis AG goes to India's Supreme Court on Wednesday to seek patent protection for its blockbuster cancer drug Glivec in a case that could deliver far-reaching ramifications for multinational pharmaceutical companies operating in India....

Novartis's critics, including Médecins Sans Frontières [Doctors Without Borders], say that if the company prevails, it could set a legal precedent that allows pharmaceutical giants to patent a range of drugs in India that are now available from generic producers, including HIV medicines. That would demolish a thriving low-cost industry and lead to higher prices, not just in India, they say, but elsewhere in the developing world where India is a major exporter of drugs.

Voice from the Field | August 13, 2012

"I'm Going to Tell The Whole World": An HIV "Expert Patient," In Her Own Words

Once "more dead than alive," a woman living with HIV in Swaziland's remote Shiselweni region is now healthy and trying to help others who are where she once was.

Alert Article | July 31, 2012

Field Journal: Community Care

Press Release | July 24, 2012

MSF at IAC 2012: First-Ever Study of HIV Treatment Policies in 23 Countries

A first-of-its-kind study released today at the International AIDS Conference by MSF maps progress across 23 countries on HIV treatment strategies, tools, and policies needed to increase treatment scale-up. 

Press Release | July 24, 2012

MSF at IAC 2012: Measuring Viral Load in Resource-Poor Settings Not a Luxury

As HIV treatment is scaled up in developing countries, the lack of access to viral load monitoring, a method of measuring the level of HIV in a patient that is routinely used in wealthy countries, must be addressed. 

Press Release | June 18, 2012

Myanmar: Victims of Recent Clashes Must Have Access to Health Care

Violence and deep communal divisions in Rakhine State are preventing people from receiving emergency medical treatment.

Field News | April 18, 2012

DRC: A Fashion Show Featuring Women Living with HIV

MSF helped organize a fashion show for women living with HIV to show what is possible when treatment is made available and to alert the public to the tragic lack of access to treatment in the country.

Press Coverage | April 10, 2012

Voice of America: Better Treatment for HIV-Positive Pregnant Women

The World Health Organization recently issued new guidelines to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV. The recommendations include getting more women on treatment sooner and staying on it for life. The guidelines have the support of the medical aid group Doctors Without Borders, also known as MSF.

Briefing Documents | March 26, 2012

Issue Brief: Losing Ground

MSF calls on the stakeholders of the Global Fund to convene an emergency donor conference and to open a new early funding window to ensure that the Fund is fully functional in 2012.

Press Release | March 12, 2012

Access to Medicines: India Offers First Compulsory License

A landmark patent ruling in India could possibly set a precedent that allows patients in developing countries far greater access to essential medicines.

Field News | February 28, 2012

Infographic: The Need For HIV and TB Treatment in Myanmar

Tens of thousands of people living with HIV and tuberculosis  in Myanmar are unable to access lifesaving antiretroviral therapy, a dire situation exacerbated by the recent cancellation of a new round of funding from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria.

Press Release | February 22, 2012

Myanmar: Urgent Action Needed Against HIV and TB

A new MSF report warns that cancellation of global fund grants will have devastating effect in Myanmar.

Op-Eds & Articles | February 22, 2012

Op-Ed: In Myanmar, Loss of Funding for HIV and TB Puts Lives at Risk

While international attention focuses on Myanmar, a health crisis in the country looms large. An estimated 85,000 people infected with HIV in Myanmar are not receiving lifesaving treatment. 

Voice from the Field | February 14, 2012

DRC: "At Night, the Stories . . . Come Back to Haunt Me"

MSF nurse Alice Echumbe describes her experiences as supervisor at MSF's Jamaa Letu family health center.

Press Coverage | February 10, 2012

Washington Post: EU-India FTA Could Boost AIDS Costs

Hundreds of people marched in New Delhi on Friday to protest an ambitious free-trade agreement being negotiated between India and the European Union that patient groups and health activists say could severely curtail India's production and export of affordable drugs for millions living with HIV in developing countries.

Press Release | February 9, 2012

EU-India Trade Deal Could Cut Medicines Lifeline for People in Developing Countries

A new free trade agreement between the EU and India could severely impact access to affordable medicine in developing countries.

Briefing Documents | February 9, 2012

Background on the EU-India FTA

Learn how a free trade agreement between the European Union and India could restrict access to affordable medicines for millions of people with HIV/AIDS and other diseases and conditions.

Press Release | January 30, 2012

As Global Fund Turns Ten, Lack of Political Support to Health Threatens Gains Against AIDS, TB, and Malaria

As the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria marks its tenth anniversary, people living with HIV/AIDS and those delivering treatment took to the streets in response to drastic funding shortfalls.

Press Release | January 25, 2012

DRC: Majority of People Living with HIV Denied Treatment

The vast majority of people living with the AIDS virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo are deprived of lifesaving treatment.

Press Release | December 20, 2011

MSF Releases 'Ten Stories That Mattered in Access to Medicines in 2011'

MSF has released a list of important stories that had an impact on people’s ability to access needed drugs, diagnostics, and vaccines in developing countries in 2011.

Special Report | December 19, 2011

Access to Essential Medicines: Ten Stories That Mattered in 2011

Through its Access Campaign, MSF has been closely following the developments in the world of access to medicines, vaccines, and diagnostics.

Field News | December 15, 2011

Tell Johnson & Johnson to Stop Turning its Back on AIDS Patients

On Monday, December 19, Johnson & Johnson is expected to announce whether it intends to license its patents on three lifesaving HIV/AIDS drugs to the Medicines Patent Pool, a mechanism designed to lower prices of HIV medicines and increase access to them for people in the developing world.

Field News | December 12, 2011

CAR: "Central Africa is in a state of health emergency"

"The system seems to have broken down completely. It is hugely dysfunctional at every level."

Press Release | December 7, 2011

First-Ever Treatment Guidelines Released for Major Cause of Death of People Living with HIV

MSF study shows cryptococcal meningitis as leading cause of death, but access to best treatment is a major challenge

Press Release | December 2, 2011

At African AIDS Conference, MSF Calls For Increased Funding for HIV Treatment

As Africa’s AIDS Conference convenes in Addis Ababa, the promise of new scientific evidence showing treatment helps prevent transmission is mitigated by grave concerns about global funding of HIV programs.

Op-Eds & Articles | December 1, 2011

HIV/AIDS: What To Tell The Patients Whose Treatment Isn't Funded?

The cancelation of Round 11 of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria undermines the significant progress that has been made in the uphill battles against these deadly diseases.

Press Release | December 1, 2011

Response to Obama's HIV/AIDS Speech: "Now It Is Time For All Governments To Step Up"

Response to President Obama’s December 1 speech on World AIDS Day, from MSF's Dr. Tido von Schoen-Angerer

Field News | December 1, 2011

World AIDS Day 2011: The Thinnest of Lifelines

MSF International President Dr. Unni Karunakara discusses the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria's decision not to accept grant applications this year to support treatment programs due to a catastrophic drop in donor funding. 

Press Release | November 22, 2011

MSF Response To Global Fund Board Meeting

MSF responds to the unprecedented decision taken to cancel a funding round of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.

Press Release | November 21, 2011

Expansion of Access To HIV Treatment Must Speed Up To Match Political Promises

Without appropriate funding, the opportunity to reap the benefits of new science showing that HIV treatment both saves lives and helps prevent new infections could be lost.

Voice from the Field | November 17, 2011

Treating HIV/AIDS In Myanmar

Dr. Calorine Mekiedje, MSF medical advisor at the Dawei clinic in the south of Myanmar, talks about treating HIV/AIDS in a country where much about the disease remains unknown and is not discussed.

Field News | November 17, 2011

Myanmar: Helping HIV Patients Maintain Their Treatment

An MSF outreach counselor in southern Myanmar travels village to village as part of the effort to treat HIV/AIDS and HIV-TB co-infection in the country.

Field News | November 17, 2011

DRC: Conditions Are Still Critical

Decades of conflict and a lack of government investment have made it difficult for people in DRC to access even the most basic health care. 

Alert Article | November 1, 2011

A Long Way to go on HIV/AIDS

In early June, world leaders and global health officials gathered at the United Nations for a summit meeting on HIV/AIDS. Among the outcomes was a new treatment target, a plan to get 15 million people living with HIV/AIDS on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment by the year 2015.

Press Release | October 31, 2011

G20 Leaders Should Bail Out Global Health With a Financial Transaction Tax

The financial transaction tax due to be discussed at this week's G20 Summit could help save millions of lives if a portion of it were put toward global health.

Press Release | October 1, 2011

Falsified Medicines Enter Supply Chain in Kenya

After spotting irregularities in one medication being used in Kenya, MSF is correcting the supply problem and taking all measures to ensure adequate treatment and follow-up care for patients.

Press Release | September 8, 2011

Access to Lifesaving Generic Medicines Threatened by US Trade Pact

Access to affordable lifesaving medicines will be threatened where they are needed most if the U.S. implements restrictive intellectual property policies in the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement.

Press Release | September 6, 2011

Drug Company Novartis Tries to Weaken Indian Patent Law that Protects Patients

Novartis is lobbying India's Supreme Court to undo a key safeguard in Indian patent law, which would have a devastating impact on access to affordable medicines across the developing world.

Special Report | July 18, 2011

Untangling the Web of Antiretroviral Price Reductions, 14th Edition

This is the 14th edition of Untangling the Web of Antiretroviral Price Reductions (UTW), released at the International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference 2011 in Rome.

Press Release | July 18, 2011

HIV Drug Discounts Shut Down in Middle-Income Countries

Several pharmaceutical companies have abandoned HIV drug discount programs in middle-income countries, according to an HIV drug price report released by MSF.

Press Release | July 12, 2011

Gilead Licence Expands Access, But Several Countries Left Out

Pharmaceutical company Gilead's move to license several HIV/AIDS drugs to the Medicines Patent Pool could improve access but excludes several countries with many people living with HIV.

Press Release | June 9, 2011

Target Of 15 Million People On HIV Treatment By 2015 Secured At AIDS Summit

The participants of the UN Summit on AIDS took a critical step by committing to reach 15 million people with HIV treatment by 2015, but they must take concrete action to truly make this happen.

Press Release | June 6, 2011

Governments Today To Decide Fate of Nine Million Lives Before AIDS Summit

Now that research has shown that HIV treatment can reduce transmission by 96 percent, governments meeting at the UN Summit on AIDS must agree to put nine million people on treatment over the next four years.

Special Report | May 31, 2011

Getting Ahead of the Wave: Lessons for the Next Decade of the AIDS Response

While several countries hardest hit by the AIDS epidemic are improving HIV treatment protocols to reduce deaths and illness, a lack of support from donors prevents many from implementing vital changes.

Field News | May 27, 2011

Treat AIDS: Stop the Virus

Governments will meet at the UN in New York for an HIV/AIDS Summit June 8-10 to discuss the future of the global response to HIV. Hanging in the balance will be the lives of the ten million people.

Alert Article | May 24, 2011

Papua New Guinea: Treating Survivors of an Overwhelming Violence

Papua New Guinea (PNG) is a resource-rich land that won independence from its southern neighbor, Australia, in 1975 but has lagged in terms of development. The population is made up of several hundred ethnic groups that speak different dialects. Poverty is widespread, and PNG has the highest incidence of HIV/AIDS in the Pacific region. It has also long been plagued by high rates of crime and extremely high rates of domestic violence and violence against women. Seventy percent of women in PNG say they’ve been physically abused by their husbands, according to the PNG Law Reform Commission, and in some parts of the country that number reaches 100 percent.

Alert Article | May 24, 2011

DNDi and New Drugs for Neglected Diseases

Founded in 2003, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) brings together the academic, medical, public health, and pharmaceutical worlds to create effective drugs to treat neglected diseases like Chagas disease, sleeping sickness, and visceral leishmaniasis.

Field News | May 19, 2011

Women's Struggle Against HIV in Rural Zimbabwe

“I’m afraid of my husband. He knows I’m positive but he lives in denial. And he has threatened with killing me if I bring condoms home,” explains a woman to the counsellor.

Press Release | May 11, 2011

MSF Report: Fragile Progress as Several Countries Upgrade to Better AIDS Treatment

While several countries hardest hit by HIV/AIDS are improving treatment protocols to reduce deaths and illness, a lack of donor support still prevents many from implementing vital changes.

Press Release | April 25, 2011

Johnson & Johnson Turns Its Back on AIDS Patients

Johnson & Johnson, which holds patents on three key new HIV drugs desperately needed throughout the developing world, has so far refused to license these patents to the Medicines Patent Pool.

Open Letters | April 25, 2011

Letter to Johnson & Johnson CEO Regarding the Company's Failure to Put Urgently Needed AIDS Drugs in the Medicines Patent Pool

I am writing on behalf of MSF to express our disappointment that J&J has not yet placed any patent into the Medicines Patent Pool and that it has announced in a recent letter to the Medicines Patent Pool that it is not ready to engage in formal negotiations.

Field News | March 16, 2011

Mozambique: A Long Fight Against HIV/AIDS But an Uncertain Outcome

Despite some encouraging trends among people living with HIV in Mozambique, a great deal of work remains to be done.

Voice from the Field | February 15, 2011

Malawi: "My Life is Important"

In July 2002, Fred Minandi, one of MSF's first patients in Malawi to receive antiretroviral drugs, spoke about his daily life at the 14th international conference on HIV/AIDS, held in Barcelona.

Field News | February 14, 2011

Malawi: An Overview of MSF's HIV/AIDS Programs

Voice from the Field | February 14, 2011

Malawi: Challenges Ahead in HIV Treatment

New WHO directives on the treatment of HIV/AIDS bring new opportunities and new challenges, says MSF's former Head of Mission in Malawi.

Press Release | January 28, 2011

Access to Medicines: Johnson & Johnson/Tibotec AIDS Drug Licenses Exclude Too Many Patients

The licenses a Johnson & Johnson-owned pharmaceutical company, Tibotec, granted to three generic drug makers will keep a promising new AIDS medicine from many patients across the developing world, MSF says.

Press Release | January 12, 2011

Access: Indian Prime Minister Must Resist European Pressure to Trade Away Health

India should resist pressure from the EU to accept a free trade agreement that will have an exceedingly negative impact on access to affordable medicines

Press Release | January 7, 2011

India Rejects Patents for Two Key AIDS Drugs

January 7, 2011, New Delhi—The Indian Patent Office has just rejected patent applications related to two AIDS medicines – lopinavir/ritonavir and atazanavir - on the basis that they did not merit patents under India’s patents law.  The decisions mark a major victory for public health, and keep the door open for the production of more affordable generics that health providers such as Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) rely on to treat patients across the developing world. 

Special Report | December 29, 2010

Access to Essential Medicines: Ten Stories That Mattered in 2010

Through its Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, MSF has been closely following the developments in the world of access to medicines, vaccines and diagnostics.

Press Release | December 10, 2010

At EU-India Summit, European Negotiators Urged Not to Block Access to Affordable Medicines

MSF joins other advocates for people living with HIV/AIDS to demand the EU stop pursuing measures that undermine India’s role as producer of affordable life-saving generic medicines

Press Release | December 8, 2010

Denied Funding Puts HIV Patients in Low-Income Countries at Risk of Death

Several low-income countries highly affected by HIV risk being entirely or partly disqualified from the current funding round by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Special Report | November 30, 2010

HIV/AIDS Progress Under Siege

But just as important gains are beginning to show their promise for patients, a stagnation in donor funding, coupled with trade policies that will create serious additional barriers to accessing affordable generic medicines, are dealing HIV/AIDS treatment a double blow.

Special Report | November 29, 2010

HIV/AIDS: Simplify to Treat More

In late 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued new international recommendations concerning the fight against HIV/AIDS. WHO advocates treating more patients by starting antiretroviral therapy at an earlier stage and using higher quality drugs. These measures will result in an increase in the number of infected people eligible for treatment. While beneficial, the new recommendations pose many challenges and come amid an unfavorable global environment.  

Press Release | November 29, 2010

AIDS Progress Threatened by Double Blow, Warns MSF

HIV/AIDS treatment in developing countries is being dealt a double blow that will mean treatment recommendations cannot be implemented and the promise of new scientific research will remain unfulfilled.

Special Report | November 24, 2010

Mozambique: A Look Back at 10 Years of HIV Projects

The number of patients on treatment has risen dramatically over the last few years. At the end of August 2010, more than 200,000 patients were on ARV treatment in Mozambique, of whom more than 33,000 were being treated with the assistance of MSF.

Voice from the Field | November 23, 2010

Eneza Ujumbe: The Voices of Mathare Youth

"Eneza Ujumbe: The Voices of Mathare Youth" is a newsletter written by and produced by young people living with HIV in Mathare, a slum on the edge of Nairobi. MSF runs a clinic in Mathare called the Blue House, which provides healthcare to thousands of people. 

Press Release | November 18, 2010

Swaziland: Dual HIV and Tuberculosis Epidemic Demands Urgent Action

The dual epidemic of tuberculosis and HIV is devastating Swaziland, cutting life expectancy there from 60 to just 31 years of age, MSF said today in a new report.

Briefing Documents | November 5, 2010

The Truth Behind the Spin: How the Europe-India Free Trade Agreement Will Harm Access to Medicines

The crucial role India plays in supplying the developing world with affordable quality medicines is being threatened.

Field News | November 5, 2010

Why India's Generic Medicines Industry is So Important

In 2005, India put in place a patent lawfortunately it’s a law that supports public health objectives, so the result has been that India's generic manufacturers have had some space to continue producing affordable and effective medicines.

Special Report | October 28, 2010

China: Joint Review of Guangxi MSF/CDC HIV Project

The first confirmed case of HIV infection in China was reported in 1989. Twenty years later, UNAIDS estimates that there are some 740,000 people living with HIV/AIDS across the country, with an estimated 48,000 new infections in 2009. By the early 2000s, Chinese authorities had recognised the widespread nature of the HIV epidemic and reacted by implementing new policies, as well as treatment, prevention and control programmes.

Field News | October 28, 2010

China: MSF Hands Over HIV Project to Local Health Authorities

"Since the project started in 2003, the quality of medical care offered to HIV patients in Guangxi Province has vastly improved,” said Gilles Isard, head of mission for Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in China.

Press Coverage | October 7, 2010

The Human Consequences of an Under-financed Global Fund

There was a major setback this week in the global fight to treat and prevent HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. The Global Fund brought in pledges of $11.7 billion over three years to fight these diseases. The fund was hoping to raise $20 billion. Doctors Without Borders says this shortfall will cost lives and severely weaken the ability of countries to reverse the tide of these killer infectious diseases around the world.

Press Release | September 30, 2010

NIH Entry Into Medicines Patent Pool is a Welcome First Step

Geneva/New York – September 30, 2010 – The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced today it will license a patent for an HIV medicine to the Medicines Patent Pool, a mechanism designed to boost access to more affordable AIDS drugs in the developing world. The move acts as a wake-up call to pharmaceutical companies to put patents on key AIDS medicines into the pool, said the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Press Release | September 27, 2010

Underfinanced Global Fund Will Put Millions At Risk

New York, September 28, 2010 – Country contributions to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM)—to be announced at next week’s donor replenishment meeting in New York—are expected to fall far short of the $20 billion needed for the Fund to maintain and expand its grant programs.

Transcript | September 20, 2010

MSF Teleconference: The Need for Innovative Financing for Global Health

MSF Teleconference on Innovative Financing Mechanisms for Global Health, conducted September 20, 2010

Field News | September 16, 2010

Mozambique: Community Model for HIV/AIDS Treatment

Where resources are scarce, community groups can help maximize HIV/AIDS treatment and support each other.

Press Release | September 16, 2010

Lack of Funding Undercuts Opportunities to Overcome Global Health Threats

The fight against childhood malnutrition and HIV could be transformed by innovative funding mechanisms currently tabled at UN Millennium Development Goals Summit.

Press Release | September 6, 2010

Any New Financial Transaction Tax Must Dedicate a Proportion of its Funds to Health

Brussels, September 6, 2010As finance ministers from the European Union gather in Brussels for a formal meeting to discuss the establishment of an EU-wide financial transaction tax, MSF calls on them to dedicate a proportion of the receipts from any fundraising mechanism to global health.

Voice from the Field | July 23, 2010

After the 18th International AIDS Conference, Possibilities for Scaling Up Optimal HIV/AIDS Treatment

As the 18th International AIDS Conference (IAC) winds down here in Vienna, the word in the hallways is that the science is in: earlier initiation of treatment and improved antiretroviral (ARV) drug regimens are better for individual patients and communities, and may even ultimately reduce transmission of HIV.

Press Coverage | July 20, 2010

One Casualty of Global Economic Crisis: Uncertain Finances for HIV/AIDS Programs

The American Medical Association examines the current financing situation for HIV/AIDS programs in the midst of a persistent global economic crisis.

Press Release | July 19, 2010

HIV/AIDS: Donors Retreat From Funding, Gamble with Patients' Lives

International donors are disregarding scientific evidence and seeking short-term cost savings at the expense of ten million people in need of treatment for HIV/AIDS.

Special Report | July 14, 2010

HIV/AIDS: The Stories Behind the Science

As the International AIDS Conference (IAC) gets underway in Vienna, MSF is launching a report, “The Ten Consequences of AIDS Treatment Delayed, Deferred, or Denied," a guide to the devastation that can be expected if current trends continue.

Field News | June 7, 2010

Blog: An Alternate View of the 2010 World Cup

In South Africa, where the FIFA World Cup is getting under way, MSF is trying to show that beating HIV/AIDS should be the ultimate goal.

Press Release | May 26, 2010

Donor Retreat Widens HIV/AIDS Treatment Gap in Africa

Johanesburg/New York, May 27, 2010 - Backtracking by international donors of HIV/AIDS treatment risks undermining years of positive achievements and will cause many more unnecessary deaths, warned the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in a new report released today.

Press Coverage | May 18, 2010

PRI: Donors Retreat From The War On AIDS

Of the 33 million people living with AIDS worldwide, only 4 million are on treatment. We have an update from Emi McLean, director of the access to essential medicines campaign for the international humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders.

Press Coverage | May 10, 2010

The New York Times: At Front Lines, AIDS War Is Falling Apart

“The political winds have changed,” said Sharonann Lynch, chief author of the Doctors Without Borders report. “And I don’t believe for a minute it’s just the economic downturn. I think world leaders feel the heat is off and they’re fatigued.”

Press Release | May 6, 2010

Victory for Access to Medicines as Patent Rejected in India

Valganciclovir is primarily used as treatment and prevention of an infection caused by cytomegalovirus (CMV) in organ transplant patients, a highly lucrative market that Roche has sought to protect by patenting the medicine. But CMV also affects people living with HIV, and if left untreated, can cause blindness and death.

Field News | May 5, 2010

Kenya: MSF Hands Over Integrated Care Program for People Living with HIV/AIDS

After ten years of providing integrated healthcare for people living with HIV/AIDS in Busia, MSF is ready to hand over the program.

Press Coverage | April 28, 2010

Newsweek: AIDS Programs Hit Setbacks in Africa

One year ago, Obama unveiled a new $63 billion global health initiative. So why are advocacy groups raising the alarm about HIV treatment shortages?

Field News | April 20, 2010

Access: Trading Away The Lives of People Living with HIV/AIDS

Closed-door negotiations between India and the EU are entering a crucial phase; at stake is access to affordable medicines for millions.

Field News | March 23, 2010

Lesotho: Inspired by His Grandmother, A Patient Helps Others

Lay counselors are an intergral part of MSF's TB and HIV programs in Lesotho, and each has a story to tell.

Field News | March 23, 2010

Lesotho: A “Well-Spring of Hope” in a Mountain Kingdom Haunted by TB/HIV

The beautiful, mountainous landscape is visible through the windows, but the patients here are all in serious condition, suffering from tuberculosis (TB), the leading cause of death of people living with HIV in Lesotho.

Field News | March 22, 2010

Tuberculosis: An Unfortunate Resurgence

At one time, TB was considered on its way to being eradicated. However, the disease started a frightening comeback beginning in the 1980s and lasting through the present day.

Press Release | March 9, 2010

AIDS Care Gap between Wealthy and Developing Countries Risks Becoming a Chasm

London, March 9, 2010 – AIDS leaders gathering in London today face the daunting challenge of implementing new WHO recommendations for earlier treatment with better AIDS drug cocktails at a time when donors are backing away from the promise of “universal access."

Press Release | February 12, 2010

Heat-Stable Ritonavir Approved: Years of medical double standards and stranglehold by Abbott come to an end

Paris/New York, February 12, 2010—Both the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have recently approved the long-awaited heat-stable 100mg tablet version of ritonavir, the antiretroviral booster drug produced by Abbott Laboratories.

Top Ten Humantarian Crises | December 31, 2009

Funding for AIDS Treatment Stagnating Despite Millions Still in Need

Press Coverage | December 10, 2009

CNN: Inside Africa

No doubt strides have been made in giving more people access to anti-retroviral drugs. But will the progress continue? Jim Clancy put that question to Emi Maclean, Director of the Doctors Without Borders Access Campaign.

Press Coverage | December 10, 2009

Forbes: The Next AIDS Crisis

Eric Goemaere hopes the patent pool will work out so he doesn't have to watch his patients in Khayelitsha die. In the U.S. HIV patients have a 69-year life expectancy. But his patients in Khayelitsha are running out of options after only 8 years on therapy. "I don't accept the principle of double standards," he says. "If it's possible to get 69 years of life in the U.S., it should be possible to get something comparable in South Africa."

Press Coverage | December 2, 2009

Time: Is Obama Scaling Back Bush's AIDS Initiative?

Many global health advocates worry that the success of PEPfAR — an initiative that has consistently enjoyed broad bipartisan support — may be jeopardized by harsh economic realities and shifting political priorities.  After five straight years of funding hikes and public-health victories, the slowdown has AIDS advocates scratching their heads: Why would the Obama Administration back off from the one universally popular program inherited from Bush?

Field News | November 24, 2009

HIV/AIDS: Global Fund Board Commits to New Funding Round

The Board of Directors of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria recently voted to authorize a new call for proposals in 2010, the success of which will ultimately depend on whether donors commit to fully funding the Global Fund. Without adequate funding, the progress and pace of scale-up of lifesaving HIV/AIDS treatment, particularly antiretroviral therapy (ART), supported by the Global Fund will be threatened.

Voice from the Field | November 10, 2009

Malawi: "How can you go back to rationing access to care?"

The increase in availability of antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) used to treat HIV in recent years, backed by solid funding commitments, has given millions of people in poor countries a new lease on life. This is the case for tens of thousands of people living with HIV/AIDS in Malawi’s southern Thyolo district. Here, Olesi Ellemani Pasulani, clinical officer for Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at the Thyolo District Hospital, shares his perspective on how improved access to care has changed the lives of people living with HIV/AIDS and the healthcare workers who treat them.

Special Report | November 5, 2009

HIV/AIDS: Punishing Success?

Today, the good news is that four million HIV-positive people are alive on antiretroviral therapy (ART). The bad news is that MSF teams working to treat HIV/AIDS are witnessing worrying signs of waning international support to combat HIV/AIDS.

Press Release | November 5, 2009

Punishing Success in Tackling AIDS

Johannesburg/New York, November 5, 2009 — A retreat from international funding commitments for AIDS threatens to undermine the dramatic gains made in reducing AIDS-related illness and death in recent years, according to a new report released today by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Voice from the Field | October 29, 2009

Patient Story: “This painful treatment is my only way out of drug-resistant TB”

“I understand what other patients are going through because, after all, I am also a patient. I take a minimum of 15 pills each day just to fight against drug-resistant TB."

Field News | October 28, 2009

Swaziland: An MSF Doctor Explains HIV-TB Co-Infection

MSF doctor Hermann Reuter works in a tuberculosis (TB) project in a rural district of Swaziland called Shiselweni.

Special Report | October 28, 2009

HIV-TB in Swaziland: A Deadly Co-Infection Epidemic

Swaziland in Southern Africa is on the brink of a major health crisis due to the killer twin epidemic of HIV-AIDS and TB.

Field News | October 7, 2009

Make It Happen Campaign Update

A week since the campaign was launched, well over 7,000 e-mails have been sent to the drug companies by supporters from Japan to Mexico, Myanmar to Burkina Faso.

Press Release | September 30, 2009

Drug Companies Called On to Pool HIV Patents

New York/London, September 30, 2009 – The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today called on nine of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies to help accelerate the availability of new treatments for millions of people living with HIV/AIDS, by pooling their patents on a list of key HIV medicines.

Alert Article | September 30, 2009

Kenya: Preventing Mother-to-Child HIV

MSF Nurse Colette Kerr describes her experience in Busia, a rural district in western Kenya, where MSF runs an HIV/AIDS project. Kerr oversaw the prevention of mother-to-child transmission program for pregnant women and new mothers.

Alert Article | September 30, 2009

Humanitarian Space

In the developing world, HIV/AIDS is an increasingly threatening emergency. Shortages of appropriate drugs and diagnostics are now joined by new challenges. Funds for programs have dried up, even though much-needed newer drugs are priced beyond the reach of most people.

Special Report | September 29, 2009

Make It Happen – Help Us Get HIV Drugs In The Pool

When drug companies put their patents into a patent pool, they still get their royalties, while other companies use the patents to make cheaper drugs. Everyone wins.

Alert Article | September 29, 2009

HIV/AIDS Progress Under Siege

With a dire need for newer medications, a shortfall in funding and no increases on the horizon, the AIDS emergency in the developing world is far from over. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) spoke out at the International AIDS Society Conference held in July in Cape Town, South Africa, to push for urgent action.

Field News | September 25, 2009

MSF Welcomes HIV Vaccine Trial With Cautious Optimism

An HIV vaccine trial in Thailand involving 16,000 volunteers showed potentially promising results as transmission of the virus was cut by a third. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) welcomes the initiative as it opens up a new chapter in HIV vaccine research.

Field News | September 1, 2009

India: Patent Rejection Raises Hopes for Cheaper HIV/AIDS Drugs

Indian authorities have rejected patent requests from United States pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences for two life-saving HIV/AIDS drugs, Tenofovir and Darunavir, as they were considered to be in infringement of the patent law.

Field News | August 19, 2009

Malawi: MSF Brings HIV Treatment Closer to Patients

With approximately 930,000 infected persons, Malawi has one of the world's highest HIV/AIDS rates. But although 211 national facilities were offering free antiretroviral medicine (ARVs) as of late 2008, only 50 percent of patients had access to the drugs and another 290,000 were still awaiting treatment. To combat this alarming health emergency, MSF is applying a new decentralized HIV approach that brings treatment closer to the patients.

Voice from the Field | August 17, 2009

Patient Story From Zimbabwe: "I thought I was going to die"

In Murwira Clinic, southeastern Zimbabwe, Dennis Taronga is receiving antiretroviral (ARV) therapy with the help of MSF. Taronga, a husband and father of three who used to work as a builder, contracted cholera in January 2009 in the historic cholera outbreak that infected nearly 100,000 people and left thousands dead. This is his story.

Alert Article | July 24, 2009

Myanmar: Delivering Care to Isolated Rohingya

During the rainy season, which would coincide with the hunger gap—the time just before the next harvest when food stocks dwindle—we would treat more than 1,200 severely and moderately malnourished children every week. Because of this great need, we refused to allow anything to interfere with our activities.

Field News | July 22, 2009

Malawi: Universal Access to HIV Treatment Threatened by High Prices for Newer Drugs

Marielle Bemelmans, MSF head of mission in Malawi, explains how universal access to HIV drugs works in Malawi and why the high prices of new HIV/AIDS drugs puts this great achievement in peril.

Press Release | July 20, 2009

Sub-Optimal Treatment Threatening Survival of HIV/AIDS Patients

Cape Town, July 20, 2009 – Stagnation in HIV/AIDS funding and the high cost of new medicines are putting the lives of thousands of poor patients at risk, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned today at the 2009 International AIDS Society conference in South Africa . Patients needing new drug regimens will return to AIDS “death row.” While the lack of access to antiretroviral treatment for seven million people remains unaddressed, inadequate financing now further threatens treatment scale-up.

Special Report | July 20, 2009

HIV/AIDS Treatment in Developing Countries

Over three million people living with HIV/AIDS in the developing world receive antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, the medicines and diagnostic tools available are inadequate to respond fully to their needs. In addition, seven million people are in need of treatment and are still waiting for access.

Press Release | July 17, 2009

Disruptions in HIV Drug Supplies and Funding Endangering Patients' Lives

Cape Town, July 17, 2009 - Recent disruptions in the supply of anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs and other essential medical items in at least six African countries are putting HIV patients’ lives at risk, said the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today, in advance of the International AIDS Society Conference in Cape Town, South Africa.

Field News | May 5, 2009

MSF Hands Over Transnistria HIV/AIDS Projects

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has announced the closure of HIV/AIDS-treatment projects in Transnistria, a breakaway region of Moldova unrecognized by the international community.

Press Release | April 27, 2009

Prices for AIDS Drugs Slashed, but Patents Prevent Access in Some Countries

UNITAID and the Clinton Foundation’s HIV/AIDS Initiative (CHAI) have just announced price reductions negotiated with generic companies for 41 adult and pediatric antiretroviral formulations to treat HIV/AIDS. This is welcome news which must be interpreted with caution, says international medical humanitarian organization, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Field News | March 26, 2009

Condoms are Key in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS

"Condoms are the key to safe sex. They not only prevent HIV but many sexually transmitted infections. And they prevent unwanted pregnancies. Sexual intercourse is a reality of the human condition. Promoting only abstinence to control the HIV/AIDS epidemic is a naïve and unrealistic approach. A more attainable goal is to ensure that people behave in a safe way."

Press Release | February 24, 2009

MSF Successfully Hands over HIV/AIDS Project in Transnistria

Amsterdam/Chisinau, February 24, 2009 — Today, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) called on the Moldovan and Transnistrian authorities as well as the international donor community to pay more attention to the health needs of the population of Transnistria.

Press Release | February 17, 2009

Raging Cholera Just Tip of Zimbabwe's Humanitarian Crisis

Harare/Johannesburg/New York, February 17, 2009 —Zimbabwe's humanitarian crisis continues to rapidly deteriorate, causing appalling suffering, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned today. The organization’s medical teams have now treated almost 45,000 people for cholera, an estimated 75 percent of the total number of cases in the current outbreak, and the crisis is far from over.

Field News | February 16, 2009

New Patents Stance by UK Drugs Company Must Be Turned into Action

MSF welcomes recognition by UK drugs company GlaxoSmithKline that patents act as a barrier to research and development and that patent pools offer new ways to stimulate research into neglected diseases. Promises now need to be turned into action.

Top Ten Humantarian Crises | December 31, 2008

HIV/TB Co-Infection Poses Health Battle on Two Fronts

Every year, tuberculosis (TB) kills about 1.7 million people and 9 million develop active disease. TB is on the rise in countries with high HIV rates, particularly in southern Africa, which has the highest rates of HIV. Tuberculosis is one of the leading causes of death for people living with HIV/AIDS, and in the past 15 years, new TB cases have tripled in countries with high HIV prevalence. People living with HIV/AIDS are up to 50 times more likely to develop active TB in a given year compared with HIV-negative individuals, and roughly a third of the 33 million people living with HIV/AIDS worldwide are infected with latent TB. Yet, in 2006 less than one percent of people living with HIV/AIDS were screened for TB.

Special Report | December 22, 2008

Top Ten Humanitarian Crises of 2008

Massive forced civilian displacements, violence, and unmet medical needs in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, Iraq, Sudan, and Pakistan, along with neglected medical emergencies in Myanmar and Zimbabwe, are some of the worst humanitarian and medical emergencies in the world, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported today in its annual list of the “Top Ten” humanitarian crises.

Press Release | December 4, 2008

Patent for Valganciclovir Set Aside in India; Could Mean More HIV-Positive People Saved From Blindness

Geneva, December 4, 2008—International medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) welcomes the ruling by the Madras High Court instructing India's patent office to hear the opponents to the patent application for valganciclovir by the pharmaceutical company Roche.

Press Release | December 1, 2008

Nine Out of Ten Children are Denied Livesaving HIV/AIDS Treatment

Geneva, November 28, 2008 - MSF calls on governments and donors to roll out existing tests faster and to considerably increase the use of a pediatric version of a standard fixed-dose combination drug – a pill that combines all needed drugs in one tablet.

Field News | November 26, 2008

Too Many Children with HIV/AIDS Still Waiting for Treatment

There are an estimated 2.1 million children living with HIV/AIDS, according to UNAIDS, 90 percent of whom are from sub-Saharan Africa.  Only 10 percent receive any treatment for the disease.

Field News | November 26, 2008

Pascal's Story: One Pill When the Sun Rises and One When It Sets

A family in Homa Bay, Kenya describes the benefit of a fixed dose combination antiretroviral for their son's HIV/AIDS treatment.  Of the 22 antiretroviral drugs currently available, eight are not approved for pediatric use and seventeen are not available in pediatric formulations. There is a clear and urgent need for more research and development of child-friendly antiretroviral drugs. 

Special Report | November 25, 2008

A Preventable Fate: The Failure of ART Scale-Up in Myanmar

Thousands of people are needlessly dying due to a severe lack of lifesaving HIV/AIDS treatment in Myanmar. Unable to continue shouldering the primary responsibility for responding to one of Asia’s worst HIV crises, MSF insists that the government of Myanmar and international organizations urgently and rapidly scale-up the provision of antiretroviral therapy.

Press Release | November 25, 2008

Myanmar: Urgent Lack of HIV/AIDS Treatment Threatens Thousands

Geneva, Amsterdam, Yangon, November 25, 2008—Thousands of people are needlessly dying due to a severe lack of lifesaving HIV/AIDS treatment in Myanmar, said the international medical humanitarian organization MSF in a report released today. Unable to continue shouldering the primary responsibility for responding to one of Asia’s worst HIV crises, MSF insists that the government of Myanmar and international organizations urgently and rapidly scale-up the provision of antiretroviral therapy (ART).

Alert Article | November 24, 2008

Snapshot: MSF at the 17th International AIDS Conference in Mexico City

MSF presented medical data from its HIV/AIDS treatment programs around the world at the 17th International AIDS Conference (IAC) in Mexico City

Alert Article | November 24, 2008

Taking the Plunge: Pooling Patents Could Help Get Urgently Needed New Medicines

A patent-sharing scheme that helped the United States build planes during World War I now could help drug manufacturers create new, urgently needed medicines.

Field News | October 24, 2008

Listening to HIV+Kids in Zimbabwe

Mankaza, 15, tried to get away inconspicuously from the other girls at her boarding school in southern Zimbabwe. But before she could leave the hall some of her classmates started jeering and soon all joined in, "Where are you going Mankaza? Mankaza's going to juice up, Mankaza's going to juice up!"

Press Release | September 3, 2008

Brazil Rejects Patent on an Essential AIDS Medicine

Rio de Janeiro/New York, September 2, 2008 – The Brazilian Patent Office has rejected a patent application by Gilead on the drug tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), in a move that could increase access to a key HIV/AIDS medicine across the developing world, says international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Field News | August 14, 2008

Zimbabwe: Working to Give Babies HIV-Free Lives

MSF is now treating close to 40,000 HIV-positive people in Zimbabwe, over 7,000 of whom are children. It is estimated that there are about 2 million HIV-infected people in the country. The virus can be transmitted to the fetus during the pregnancy through the placenta, though there is a higher risk of infection during delivery when the baby comes into contact with the mother’s blood.

Press Release | August 5, 2008

Children Living with HIV Deserve Fair Treatment

Mexico City, August 5, 2008 —Treating children and adolescents living with HIV effectively in resource-limited settings is possible, but adapted medicines, diagnostic tools, and treatment strategies are urgently needed to prevent more deaths, according to Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Press Release | August 3, 2008

Mind the Deadly Gaps: Health Care Worker Shortages in Southern Africa Causing Fatal Delays in Bringing AIDS Care to Those in Urgent Need

Mexico City, 3 August 2008 – On the opening day of the XVII International Aids Conference, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned of the deadly impact that the lack of health care workers is having on AIDS treatment and care in southern Africa.  In a satellite meeting called “Mind the Gaps” organized by MSF here today, experts described the scope and impact of the health care worker shortage as well as the critical need to increase government and donor commitment to taking immediate concrete steps to retain and support health care workers now.

Special Report | August 3, 2008

Running in Place: Too Many Patients Still in Urgent Need of HIV/AIDS Treatment

HIV/AIDS treatment and management are essential components of many MSF programs worldwide. Currently MSF provides antiretroviral therapy (ART) for over 140,000 patients in 27 countries, with about 10,000 of those patients being children. In conjunction with this year’s International AIDS Conference in Mexico City, this document presents MSF’s current “state of play” in providing quality care to people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) in resource-limited settings.

Field News | August 1, 2008

HIV-TB Co-infection: They're already sitting in our waiting rooms

Dr Eric Goemaere, medical co-ordinator for MSF in South Africa, discusses diagnosing and managing HIV-TB co-infection.

Field News | August 1, 2008

Affordability, Availability and Adaptability of AIDS Drugs in Developing Countries: An On-going Challenge

Karen Day, Pharmacist Coordinator for MSF’s Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, provides an overview of some of the key issues in the 11th edition report ‘Untangling the Web of Antiretroviral Price Reductions.’

Field News | August 1, 2008

"Access to Maternal-Infant Prevention and to Preventative Treatment Makes a Difference"

Elena Alonso, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) medical advisor for HIV/AIDS-TB programs.

Field News | August 1, 2008

Mind the Deadly Gaps: Health Care Worker Shortages Threaten AIDS Treatment Scale Up

Dr. Mit Philips of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) answers questions about how the lack of health care workers threatens further roll-out of HIV/AIDS treatment to those in urgent need of it in sub-Saharan Africa.

Field News | August 1, 2008

Confronting HIV-TB Co-infection in Lesotho

Dr. Peter Saranchuk was the medical coordinator at MSF’s HIV/AIDS project in Lesotho. Here, he explains the reasons behind the dangerous relationship between TB and HIV.

Field News | July 31, 2008

Taking the Plunge: How a ‘Patent Pool’ Could Help Solve the Access to Medicines Crisis

Ellen ‘t Hoen, Policy Advocacy Director of MSF’s Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, outlines how the a patent pool would work and what benefits it could bring.

Speech | May 1, 2008

MSF Intervention at IGWG

Alert Article | April 4, 2008

CMV Retinitis: Neglected Opportunistic Disease of the AIDS Pandemic Causing Blindness in Southeast Asia

For patients with advanced HIV, complications from CMV retinitis— most notably blindness—are preventable. However, screening and treatment are out of reach in many places where CMV retinitis is prevalent.

Field News | January 29, 2008

Patent revoked on Tenofovir

In a move that could have major implications on access to a cornerstone HIV/AIDS medicine across the developing world, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office on January 23, 2008 revoked four key patents held by the pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences on the drug tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF).

Field News | January 24, 2008

CMV Retinitis: Neglected Disease of the AIDS Pandemic Causing Blindness in Southeast Asia

It is not uncommon for people living with advanced HIV/AIDS in Southeast Asia to go completely blind, mysteriously, and in a very short period of time. In fact, these irreversible cases of blindness are caused by Cytomegalovirus (CMV), a member of the herpes virus family, which leads to blindness in those with compromised immune systems. Dr. David Wilson, former MSF medical coordinator in Thailand, explains why access to affordable valganciclovir is so critical in low and middle-income countries where CMV poses a major threat.

Field News | January 9, 2008

Arua, Uganda: A Difficult Decentralization

Uganda is one of the African countries that boasts of being at the forefront in the fight against AIDS. The country has initiated the decentralization of HIV/AIDS care in a plan to get all Ugandans living with HIV on effective antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. However, in its field operations in Uganda, where Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières is working to deliver quality medical care and follow-up for people living with HIV/AIDS, they've come face to face with the flaws of this decentralization process.

Special Report | December 1, 2007

Cytomegalovirus Retinitis: The Neglected Disease of the AIDS Pandemic

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a member of the herpes virus family that was a familiar cause of blindness and death in patients with advanced AIDS in Western countries in the 1980s and 1990s, when it occurred in roughly one-third of patients with AIDS.

Press Release | December 1, 2007

People in Southeast Asia Needlessly Becoming Blind Due to a Neglected Virus

Geneva/Bangkok, December 1, 2007 – Failure to diagnose and treat cytomegalovirus retinitis (CMV) in people with AIDS is leading to unnecessary blindness, according to a paper published today in the journal PLoS Medicine. The authors found in pilot studies that CMV retinitis, which has been dramatically reduced in wealthy countries since the advent of antiretroviral therapy, occurred in 23%, 27%, and 32% of patients with advanced AIDS in Cambodia, Myanmar and Thailand respectively. By training clinicians to screen and taking steps to make the best treatment affordable, the authors argue that CMV diagnosis and treatment can easily be integrated into existing AIDS treatment programs.

Press Release | July 24, 2007

New Pediatric AIDS Treatment Data Show Good Clinical Results But Sub-optimal Virological Outcomes

Sydney/New York, July 24, 2007 – New pediatric treatment data presented by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at the 4th International AIDS Society conference in Sydney, Australia, demonstrate good clinical results but sub-optimal virological outcomes. The results confirm concerns about the effectiveness of treating children without access to appropriate and adapted pediatric AIDS drug formulations.

Special Report | July 6, 2007

Pediatric AIDS Treatment Information

Because developing AIDS drugs for poor children is not profitable, many companies don’t even study the effects of existing or new adult antiretroviral drugs in children. We must make sure that the youngest people living with AIDS are not forgotten.

Special Report | July 1, 2007

CHILDREN AND HIV/AIDS

Every minute, a child under the age of 15 is infected with HIV. AIDS kills over 1,000 children every day, and claims roughly half a million young lives every year.

Voice from the Field | June 3, 2007

Pharmacist Alison Wong in Arua, Uganda

Alison Wong was the pharmacist for the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) HIV/AIDS program at Arua Regional Referral Hospital in Uganda from September 2005 to October 2006. MSF began the program in 2001 to provide antiretroviral (ARV) treatment to people in the region living with HIV. It has grown to include treatment for people co-infected with HIV and TB, and to establishing better decentralized care.

Press Release | May 24, 2007

Health Worker Shortage Limits Access to HIV/AIDS Treatment in Southern Africa

Johannesburg, South Africa, May 24, 2007 — The dire lack of health care workers in southern Africa is threatening efforts to expand access to HIV/AIDS treatment, warned the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in a new report issued today. The report covers four southern African countries–Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique and South Africa–where more than one million people still need life-saving antiretroviral treatment but do not have access to it. Lack of action will result in unnecessary illness and death.

Transcript | April 25, 2007

Thailand, Abbott, and the Second-Line Aids Crisis

Press teleconference on Thailand's compulsory licensing of an HIV/AIDS treatment, Abbott's response, and the coming crisis in availablity of second-line HIV drugs in developing countries.

Briefing Documents | April 11, 2007

The Second-Line AIDS Crisis: Condemned to Repeat?

Field News | March 23, 2007

Monica's Two Daily Struggles: Fighting Resistant Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS in Nairobi's Mathare Slum

MSF began treating MDR-TB in Kenya in May of 2006. With four patients enrolled at "Blue House" and three on the shores of Lake Victoria in a town called Homa Bay, MSF remains the only provider of MDR-TB treatment in the country today. Around Nairobi alone, it is estimated there are about 50 cases, but there is no capacity to absorb them.

Press Release | March 1, 2007

MSF Study Shows Good Outcomes for Second-line AIDS Treatment in Resource-poor Settings

Los Angeles, March 1, 2007 — New data released by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at the 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Los Angeles this week demonstrates good clinical outcomes for second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) in resource-poor settings. Newer medicines needed for second-line regimens, however, remain unaffordable and largely unavailable in affected countries, and adapted diagnostic tools needed to appropriately monitor lifelong treatment are missing.

Field News | February 14, 2007

Guatemala: Ministry of Health to Take Over Treatment of HIV Patients in Coatepec

In late December 2006, after four years of treating people living with HIV/AIDS in Coatepec, MSF transferred that responsibility to the country's public health agencies. Preparation for the handover had been underway for more than a year. The transfer was implemented gradually, concluding only when the agencies taking responsibility were ready to ensure continuity of care. MSF continues to provide treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS in Puerto Barrios and Guatemala City.

Open Letters | December 29, 2006

Letter to Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of State and Ambassador Susan Schwab, United States Trade Representative

MSF expresses concern over the US intervention in the decision by the government of Thailand to issue a compulsory license on patents for the AIDS drug efavirenz, and explains why the US government should refrain from such actions.

Press Release | November 29, 2006

People Not Getting AIDS Treatment They Need to Stay Alive

New York,  November  29, 2006  - AIDS treatment in the developing world will not be sustainable unless international institutions get serious about the high cost of newer medicines, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned today.

Press Release | November 29, 2006

MSF Welcomes Move to Overcome Patent on AIDS Drug in Thailand

Bangkok/New York, November 29, 2006 — Thailand today for the first time announced it will issue a compulsory license for use by the government to improve access to a key HIV/AIDS medicine, efavirenz. The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) welcomes this important move and urges the government to issue such licenses for the production of other essential medicines.

Press Release | November 3, 2006

Guatemala and Global Fund: Broaden Fight Against HIV/AIDS

Guatemala/Geneva, November 3, 2006 - On the occasion of the board meeting of the Global Fund to Fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, in Guatemala City, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is calling for increased efforts from the government of Guatemala and the Global Fund to maintain treatment of patients living with HIV/AIDS and to expand coverage to those not currently under treatment in Guatemala, where an estimated 60 percent of people living with HIV/AIDS requiring treatment do not receive it, according to UNAIDS.

Special Report | October 1, 2006

Development of New Drugs for TB Chemotherapy

With approximately 9 million people developing active tuberculosis (TB) every year and 1.7 million deaths annually, TB is far from under control. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection dramatically increases the risk of developing active tuberculosis and is driving the TB epidemic in Africa.

Press Release | August 15, 2006

New MSF Data Shows Treatment of Children Works in Resource-poor Settings

Toronto, Canada, August 15, 2006 — Two new studies released by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at the XVI International AIDS Conference in Toronto this week demonstrate good outcomes in antiretroviral treatment (ART) of children living with HIV/AIDS across a wide array of resource-poor settings, but also show that pediatric drug formulations are excessively overpriced, costing up to six times more than adult equivalents.

Briefing Documents | August 13, 2006

Too Little for Too Few: Challenges for Effective and Accessible Retroviral Therapy

Today, 1.3 million people are receiving ARV treatment. But a huge amount remains to be done. More than 40 million people are living with HIV/AIDS and an estimated 5 million of these are in urgent need of treatment. This means that 3.7 million are getting no treatment at all. Many of these people livein the world's poorest countries where the situation remains catastrophic.

Special Report | August 13, 2006

Untangling the Web of Price Reductions: A Pricing Guide for the Purchase of ARV's in Developing Countries

The purpose of this document is to provide information on prices and suppliers that will help purchasers make informed decisions when buying antiretrovirals (ARVs). This report is a pricing guide and does not include detailed information about the quality of the products listed.

Special Report | August 1, 2006

Neither Expeditious, nor a Solution

Canada was the first G8 country to amend its national laws to implement the World Trade Organization’s August 30th decision, allowing generic versions of patented drugs to be manufactured and exported under compulsory license.

Briefing Documents | August 1, 2006

Too Little for Too Few

In the past 5 years, considerable progress has been made in scaling-up access to antiretroviral therapy.  Today, 1.3 million people are receiving treatment.  But a huge amount remains to be done.

Press Release | July 6, 2006

Abbott Picks and Chooses Which Patients Get Crucial New Version of AIDS Drug in Developing Countries

Bangkok/New York, July 6, 2006 – People living with HIV/AIDS in developing countries in urgent need of an improved version of the AIDS drug lopinavir/ritonavir continue to be denied access to it by its sole manufacturer, Abbott Laboratories, according to the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Field News | June 8, 2006

MSF Team Frustrated by Closed Doors in China

After four years of seeking permission to bring HIV/AIDS treatment to China's Henan province, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has found the door firmly shut by the provincial authorities. Henan is particularly hard hit by HIV; between the mid-1980s and mid-1990s many poor farmers got infected in a poorly run commercial program for blood donation and transfusion.

Press Release | May 10, 2006

MSF Supports Opposition To Gilead's Tenofovir Patent Application in India

New Delhi, May 10, 2006 – The medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is today expressing its support for Indian civil society groups in their battle against a patent application by Gilead Sciences for the key AIDS drug tenofovir (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, TDF). People living with HIV/AIDS in India opposed the patent application yesterday on the grounds that the drug consists of a previously known compound, and should not be considered an invention according to India's Patent Act.

 

Field News | May 1, 2006

Broken System: The Research & Development Crisis

Caring for children with HIV/AIDS is charged with obstacles. The struggle begins with doctors not being able to tell whether antibodies found in a small baby's blood are from the mother or whether they suggest the child itself is infected with the virus. Frustrated with the situation, MSF has been cooperating with scientists working on a new technology.

Field News | May 1, 2006

Why it's High Time to Change the Rules of the Game

The HIV/AIDS pandemic has vividly brought to the world's attention the fact that an increasing percentage of the world's population lives without access to essential medicines. The access crisis is twofold — on the one hand, crucially needed diagnostics, drugs, and vaccines that safely and efficiently respond to diseases affecting the world's poorest do not exist; and on the other, patients living in poverty cannot afford their own treatment, as those medicines that do exist are priced beyond their reach.

Press Release | April 27, 2006

More Empty Promises: Abbott Fails to Supply Critical New AIDS Drug Formulation to Developing Countries

New York, April 27, 2006 – Abbott Laboratories is failing to make an important new AIDS drug formulation available to people in developing countries, according to the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). MSF urges the Chicago-based drug company to take immediate steps to make the heat-stable tablet version of lopinavir/ritonavir, marketed as Kaletra, available outside of the United States. MSF also calls on Abbott to fill an order for the medicine for 400 MSF patients in nine countries that the organization placed over one month ago on March 15, 2006.

Ideas & Opinions | April 10, 2006

New AIDS Drugs: Not for Africa

History is threatening to repeat itself for AIDS patients in the developing world. In Lagos, Nigeria, and many other parts of Africa, the next crisis has already arrived.

Press Release | March 30, 2006

Patent Application For AIDS Drug Opposed For First Time in India

New Delhi/Geneva, March 30, 2006 — Today, the Indian Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (INP+), the Manipur Network of Positive People (MNP+), and the Lawyers' Collective HIV/AIDS Unit officially submitted their opposition to a patent application filed in the Kolkata patent office by Glaxo Group Limited for Combivir, a fixed-dose combination of two AIDS drugs (zidovudine/lamivudine, or AZT/3TC). The opposition is based on technical and health grounds. If India grants a patent on this AIDS drug, it will set a precedent that will hamper access to affordable AIDS medicines worldwide.

Press Release | March 28, 2006

Not Enough Being Done to Make Essential AIDS Drugs Available

Geneva, March 28, 2006 — As the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS release a long-awaited report on their 3x5 AIDS treatment initiative, and call for universal access to AIDS drugs, the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is expressing concern that not enough is being done to make sure that the drugs needed to expand and sustain treatment are accessible to those who need them.

Press Release | March 15, 2006

Access Denied to Crucial New HIV/AIDS Medicines

Lagos/Berlin/New York, March 15, 2006 — People living with HIV/AIDS in developing countries can't get new and/or improved drugs that can make a critical difference, said the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). MSF also said that it refuses to accept the standard practice of drug companies to market less adapted drugs to African, Asian and Latin American countries while reserving improved or newly developed drugs for countries that can pay more. For this reason MSF is placing an order directly with the worldwide headquarters of Abbott Laboratories in Chicago for a new heat stable version of the drug called lopinavir/ritonavir, which the company right now only sells in the US at a price of US$9,687 (average wholesale price) per patient per year.

Transcript | March 15, 2006

Press Teleconference on Lopinavir/Ritonavir

Transcript of a press teleconference on the lack of availability of Abbott's new heat-stable Kaletra in African countries.

Briefing Documents | March 14, 2006

Unnecessary Delays By Abbott: The "CPP" Myth Debunked

Press Release | February 7, 2006

Gilead's Tenofovir 'Access Program' for Developing Countries: A Case of False Promises?

Denver, CO, February 7, 2006 — As AIDS experts gather this week in Denver to discuss advances in treatment at the 13th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is concerned that innovations from years ago are still not reaching people in developing countries. More than three years after Gilead Sciences first announced its "Access Program" for tenofovir, this key antiretroviral medicine remains largely unavailable in developing countries.

Briefing Documents | February 1, 2006

Gilead's Tenofovir Access Program for Developing Countries

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is alarmed at the lack of availability of a key antiretroviral to treat HIV/AIDS, Gilead Science's tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), marketed as Viread®.

Press Release | December 8, 2005

Newest AIDS Drugs Not Available in Africa

Abuja, Nigeria, December 8, 2005 - Newer AIDS drugs and formulations of existing drugs are urgently needed in Africa but are not available because brand name companies are choosing not to sell them and there are no generic versions, according to the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Press Release | December 6, 2005

Forcing Patients to Pay for AIDS Care Endangers Treatment Success

Abuja, Nigeria, December 6, 2005 - Having to pay for HIV/AIDS care increases the risk of treatment failure, according to new research from Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) presented this week at the International Conference on AIDS and Sexually transmitted infections in Africa (ICASA), in Abuja, Nigeria.

Field News | December 1, 2005

WORLD AIDS DAY 2005

One of the reasons that half of all children with HIV/AIDS die before the age of two is that pharmaceutical companies are not making child-friendly versions of their anti-AIDS drugs.

Ideas & Opinions | December 1, 2005

Alive at Five: Lessons Learned from AIDS Treatment in Resource-poor Settings

Dr. Alexandra Calmy, Advisor to MSF's Campaign For Access To Essential Medicines, writes about the progress and challenges of treating pediatric HIV/AIDS in resource-poor settings.

Field News | November 29, 2005

Still a Struggle: Treating Children Living with HIV/AIDS

Millions of children with HIV/AIDS die every year because there are no appropriate diagnostic tools and pediatric antiretroviral (ARV) formulations that are affordable. 95% of these children live in poor countries. In the West, infections from mother to child can be effectively prevented, and ARV therapy gives children born with HIV an excellent chance of reaching adulthood.

Field News | November 29, 2005

A Pediatrician's Perspective: Q & A with Dr. Felipe Garcia de la Vega

Felipe Garcia de la Vega is a pediatrician who first worked with MSF in Peru in 1997, followed by missions in Burma and Mozambique. Since May 2005, he has been the HIV/AIDS & TB Advisor to MSF's Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines in Geneva. He speaks about treating children with HIV/AIDS.

Press Release | November 28, 2005

Drug Companies Leave Children With AIDS To Fend For Themselves

Nairobi/New York, November 28, 2005 — One of the reasons that half of all children with HIV/AIDS die before the age of two is that pharmaceutical companies are not making child-friendly versions of their anti-AIDS drugs. Today, Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) calls on companies to make easy-to-use versions for children of all their AIDS medicines to help prolong and improve the lives of more children with HIV/AIDS. There is also a desperate need for simple and affordable AIDS tests for babies in resource-poor settings.

Field News | November 21, 2005

Living with HIV/AIDS in China

Of all the challenges Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) faces treating HIV/AIDS in China, perhaps none is as daunting as the pervasive stigma surrounding the disease

Voice from the Field | November 1, 2005

Monique Wanjala "I thought I couldn't get the virus, but no one is safe from it."

Monique Wanjala, training facilitator in the MSF program in Kibera, Nairobi, has been on antiretroviral therapy since early 2004. She speaks about her life and her work with MSF.

Field News | November 1, 2005

The Scourge of Pediatric AIDS in Kenya

Accompanied by Waweru, an HIV counselor, a woman walks into a consultation room of the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) 'Blue House' clinic in Nairobi. She is carrying a child and looks weary. Her loosely tied headscarf looks as if it is about to fall off. She has her hands full with a traditional woven bag–a "kiondo"–hanging from her shoulder and her three-year-old son, Titus, all swaddled up on her arms.

Field News | November 1, 2005

AIDS in Malawi: Tuesday is Children's Day

Children account for around 350 of the 5,000 people living with HIV/AIDS who are receiving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment through Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Chiradzulu, Malawi. Since last spring, children have had their own appointment day. Grouping the children in a pediatric clinic means that they receive more appropriate medical and psychological care.

Field News | July 29, 2005

HIV/AIDS Care in the Heart of the Slums

On June 29, MSF inaugurated a new medical clinic in Silanga, in the heart of the Kibera slum on the outskirts of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. It is the third HIV/AIDS treatment clinic opened by MSF in Kibera, the largest slum in Africa with an estimated 1.2 million inhabitants.

Press Release | July 27, 2005

Creative Approach Allows MSF To Treat Children With Aids

Rio de Janeiro/Geneva, 27 July 2005 – Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is successfully treating an increasing number of children living with HIV/AIDS, according to data from MSF treatment programs presented at a "late breaker" session at the 3rd International AIDS Society Conference in Rio de Janeiro. MSF's clinical outcomes are good despite the fact that currently available diagnostic tests and medicines are poorly adapted for children.

Special Report | June 21, 2005

MSF Pediatric AIDS Fact Sheet

Special Report | June 1, 2005

PAEDIATRIC HIV/AIDS

Every minute of every day, a child under the age of 15 is infected with HIV. AIDS kills 1,400 children every single day, and claims more than half a million young lives every year.

Briefing Documents | February 15, 2005

Data Exclusivity & Access to Medicines in Guatemala

Voice from the Field | February 10, 2005

Midwife Janthimala Price
"Our patients are living proof, living examples."

Janthimala Price, a midwife from Australia, spent 20 months at the Arua Hospital AIDS Program in rural northwestern Uganda. The program was set up in July 2002 by the Arua Regional Referral Hospital Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to treat HIV/AIDS patients.

Press Release | January 27, 2005

Global AIDS Treatment Efforts Not On Track

January 27, 2005 - The World Health Organization released its "3 by 5" progress report on January 26, 2005 at the Davos World Economic Forum congratulating itself on progress made in the drive to fight the HIV pandemic. But only 700,000, or 12%, of the nearly six million people in need of antiretroviral (ARV) treatment in developing countries have access to it today. Looking at these figures Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), who provides ARV treatment to more than 25,000 patients in 27 countries, comes to the exact opposite conclusion.

Field News | January 1, 2005

HIV/AIDS: Expanding Treatment

The benefits of treatment are clear. Patients are doing well: their immune systems are stronger, they are gaining weight, and are able to live fuller and longer lives.

Op-Eds & Articles | December 14, 2004

In War on AIDS, Generics Give Poor a Fighting Chance

Dr. Rowan Gillies
President, Medecins Sans Frontieres International Council
Bernard Hirschel
Head, HIV/AIDS Division
Geneva University Hospital

Field News | December 14, 2004

In War on AIDS, Generics Give Poor a Fighting Chance

MSF and Bernard Hirschel respond to Carol Adelman's Wall Street Journal Opinion Piece

Press Release | December 13, 2004

Health Experts, Economists, and Policy Makers Join in Appeal to Donors

Durban/Brussels, 13 December 2004: Starting from Tuesday, 14 December 2004, an alliance of renowned experts, institutions and non-governmental organizations will launch the ‘Free by 5’ declaration and present it to the World Bank, aid donors, the World Health Organization (WHO), UNAIDS and many other parties. While the WHO aims to have three million HIV-positive people on Anti-Retroviral (ARV) treatment in the course of next year, the declaration points out that ARVs and associated care need to be provided free of charge to all patients in developing countries.

Field News | December 4, 2004

Generic AIDS drugs work

A response from Roger Teck, MD, Doctors Without Borders physcian in Thyolo, Malawi to a San Francisco Chronicle op-ed article.

Field News | December 1, 2004

AIDS in Cambodia: A Second Chance at Life

In the Southeast Asian country hardest hit by HIV/AIDS, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is battling the disease with life-prolonging antiretroviral medication. But in Cambodia, there are still obstacles that must be overcome before AIDS treatment is available for all.

Press Release | November 30, 2004

WORLD AIDS DAY 2004

New York/Geneva, November 30, 2004 - Donor governments and countries hardest hit by HIV/AIDS must take immediate steps to address today's treatment deficit emergency and the gaps in research and development to fight the pandemic, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) urged on the eve of World AIDS Day 2004.

Ideas & Opinions | November 30, 2004

20 Million Deaths Later - Political Failure and Medical Impasse

By Dr. Jean-Hervé Bradol, President of MSF-France and MSF-USA Board Member, on the WHO, governments and the worsening HIV/AIDS crisis.

Op-Eds & Articles | November 20, 2004

Doctors Without Regrets

By Eric Goemaere, Special to The Times

Field News | November 2, 2004

Children and AIDS: Neglected Patients

Field News | November 2, 2004

Malawi: Seriously Affected by AIDS

Malawi's health infrastructure is weak and has so far been unable to cope with this burden of chronic illness. Comprehensive HIV care and support, including HAART (Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy), is urgently needed.

Field News | September 15, 2004

AIDS Treatment in Peru

MSF launched an HIV/AIDS treatment project in Villa El Salvador, a poor suburb of Lima with a population of 350,000.

Press Release | July 29, 2004

2 Pills a Day: Treat HIV/AIDS Now!

Arua, Uganda, 29 July 2004 - The Arua Hospital AIDS Program today commemorated two years of providing free access to antiretroviral (ARV) treatment for nearly 1,100 people living with HIV/AIDS in Arua, a rural region in northwestern Uganda. The community celebration included dramatic performances as well as visits by Jim Muhwezi, Minister of Health of Uganda, Stephen Lewis, UN Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa, and others. A partnership between the Arua Regional Referral Hospital and the international medical humanitarian organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the Arua Hospital AIDS Program also marked the occasion by releasing a clinical monitoring report showing how well patients are responding to ARV therapy and pointing to the urgent need for expansion of access to free ARV treatment in Uganda.

Press Release | July 29, 2004

Two-Year Anniversary of the Introduction of Antiretrovirals in Arua

July 29, 2004, STEPHEN LEWIS, UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa:  I am honored to share this time with all of you. I've never been at such a celebration before. I've spent the last 3 years of my life traveling through Africa, observing the situation of HIV and AIDS, and I've never been at such a moment of triumph, and I congratulate you for it. It will obviously allow me to tell the world what is happening here in Arua. I'm especially happy to be here at the invitation of the Arua Regional Hospital, and Dr. Olaro, and, of course, colleagues from MSF. I am a Canadian. I have watched MSF in many parts of the world and in my own country. In my view, MSF is probably the most principled and impressive nongovernmental organization on the planet, and it is a pleasure they are here.

Speech | July 29, 2004

Two-Year Anniversary of the Introduction of Antiretrovirals in Arua

Speech by STEPHEN LEWIS, UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa

Voice from the Field | July 15, 2004

Testimonies From HIV/AIDS Treatment Patients in Arua, Uganda

In Arua, MSF now provides medical care for nearly 3,000 people living with HIV/AIDS. In July 2004, MSF collected testimonies from patients undergoing treatment about their experiences living with HIV/AIDS before and since receiving treatment.

Field News | July 13, 2004

Children Being Neglected in AIDS Fight, Says MSF

International pharmaceutical industries and governments are failing to develop and produce AIDS medicines and diagnostic tools suited to children, claimed Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF) today at the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok.

Press Release | July 12, 2004

MSF Reports on Progress and Challenges of Expanding AIDS Treatment Programs

Bangkok, 12 July 2004 - Treatment of people living with HIV/AIDS with antiretroviral medicines (ARVs) is effective, even for patients at advanced stages of the disease living in resource-poor settings, according to new clinical data released by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today at the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok. Simplification of treatment, including use of three-in-one fixed-dose combinations (FDCs) of ARVs, has allowed MSF to rapidly scale up its AIDS treatment programs from 1,500 patients in 10 countries to 13,000 patients in 25 countries over two years. But the organization also reported that significant challenges remain, including the lack of affordable second-line drugs and pediatric formulations.

Field News | April 29, 2004

Khayelitsha 2001-2004: Celebrating 1,000 people on antiretrovirals

Since May 2001, three HIV/AIDS clinics in the three day-hospitals in Khayelitsha have been offering antiretroviral therapy to people with AIDS who need treatment.

Field News | March 25, 2004

Doctors Without Borders and the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)

Although there are many challenges to scaling up AIDS treatment in resource-limited settings, MSF has some key concerns related to the PEPFAR policy on procurement of medicines.

Open Letters | March 22, 2004

Open Letter to the US Organizers of the Conference on Fixed-Dose Combination (FDC) Drug Products in Gaborone, Botswana on March 29-30, 2004

To request that space be added to the meeting agenda for the presentation of actual field experience using FDCs, including clinical outcomes, and the identification of concrete strategies for increasing access to affordable FDCs.

Field News | March 3, 2004

Merck Breaks Promise to Reduce AIDS Drug Price in Developing Countries

More than sixteen months after the multinational pharmaceutical company Merck & Co. announced that it would reduce the price of its first-line AIDS drug Stocrin (efavirenz, EFV) to less than $1 per day in developing countries, the offer has failed to materialize.

Press Release | February 13, 2004

Two People Living With HIV/AIDS Overturn AIDS-Drug Patent

Bangkok, Thailand, February 13, 2004 - The recent court victory of two Thai people living with HIV/AIDS against a multinational pharmaceutical company is described in an article published in today's Lancet medical journal.

Speech | December 16, 2003

MSF Testimony on PEPFAR

Testimony from MSF Submitted to the Department of Health and Human Services for the Meeting of the International Subcommittee of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS Townhall Meeting on the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) Delivered By Rachel M. Cohen, U.S. Director, MSF Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines

Field News | December 1, 2003

Antiretroviral (ARV) Therapy in MSF Projects

Voice from the Field | November 10, 2003

Eric Goemaere, MD
Bringing Antiretroviral Therapy to South Africa

In Khayelitsha township, a poor area near Cape Town, Eric Goemaere, MD, head of MSF in South Africa, works with colleagues and local AIDS advocacy groups to bring antiretroviral (ARV) treatment to those who need it and to push the country's government to do much more.

Press Release | September 22, 2003

Glimmer of Hope in the Midst of Sobering AIDS News

Voice from the Field | September 10, 2003

Social Worker Alain Rias
Treating AIDS in Honduras

Volunteer social worker Alain Rias is helping MSF provide treatment for people living with HIV/AIDS in Honduras.

Press Release | February 13, 2003

Bowing to Pressure, Roche Cuts Price for AIDS Drug

Open Letters | February 12, 2003

Open Letter to the South African Government

Speech | July 7, 2002

Time to Treat: Transforming AIDS Treatment From Right to Reality

A Satatement Delivered by Fred Minandi in Barcelona, Spain, at a satellite meeting co-sponsored by MSF and Health Gap of the XIV International AIDS Conference

Press Release | July 7, 2002

Waiting to Treat AIDS Is A Crime

Special Report | December 18, 2001

Treating HIV/AIDS in Malawi

Speech | July 16, 2001

Solving the HIV/AIDS Drug Access Crisis In Africa: Meeting the Challenge to Save Millions of Lives and to Mitigate the Orphan Crisis

A Congressional Briefing delivered in Washington, D.C. by Rachel Cohen, Advocacy Liaison for MSF's Access to Essential Medicines Campaign

Speech | June 21, 2001

Dying For Lack of Treatment: The International AIDS Crisis

An MSF-sponsored panel discussion held at the Graduate Center, CUNY

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

Campaign Update: Access to HIV/AIDS Medicines

From Thailand to South Africa, MSF field projects still struggle to overcome cost barriers associated with antiretroviral medicines and treatments for common HIV-related opportunistic infections.

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

The Deadly Global Statistics

According to the Joint United Nations Program on AIDS (UNAIDS), 95% of the world's 36 million people with HIV/AIDS live in the developing world. Seventy per cent of adults and 80% of children with HIV/AIDS live in Africa.

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

An Overview of MSF's HIV/AIDS Programs Around the World

MSF currently operates or is implementing nearly 50 HIV/ AIDS projects in over 25 countries.

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

From Despair to Hope: Providing Antiretroviral Therapy in South Africa

It took coming to South Africa as an MSF volunteer for me to understand that the horror of apartheid had not disappeared. A new scourge, AIDS, had appeared in its place.

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

MSF and HIV/AIDS: Overcoming Challenges to Treatment

In this issue of Alert, several MSF field projects present their insights on treating HIV/AIDS in Africa, Latin America, Asia, and Eastern Europe.

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

News & Events

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

Making it Happen: Antiretroviral Treatment in Cameroon

Pierre is a patient at the MSF/PRESICA HIV clinic in Yaoundé, the capital of Cameroon. Since January 2001, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been running a pilot project providing antiretroviral (ARV) therapy to people living with AIDS. Pierre is one of the lucky few to receive this treatment, and he is beating the odds.

Press Release | March 12, 2001

International Petition Campaign Launched

Press Release | February 7, 2001

AIDS Triple Therapy for Less than $1 a Day

Transcript | November 20, 2000

World AIDS Day Teleconference Transcript

Press Release | July 21, 2000

G8 Needs to Do More in the Battle Against AIDS

Speech | April 25, 2000

MSF and AIDS

Delivered by Joelle Tanguy, U.S. Executive Director, MSF, at the Global Health Council HHS Consultations, Washington D.C.

Field News | September 21, 1998

News for the Week of September 21, 1998

Video

Patent Pools Explained

September 2009