Missing the Target #5: Improving AIDS Drug Access and Advancing Health Care for All

Publications - Released in 2007

At the G8 meeting in Gleneagles in 2005 and again at the United Nations UNGASS session in 2006, world leaders promised to come as close as possible to providing universal access to AIDS treatment and prevention by 2010. Estimates of HIV incidence and prevalence will change, but by any account, today several million people in desperate need of AIDS treatment do not have access to it. And at the current pace of growth in treatment delivery, several million will not have access by the end of 2010. Broken promises will mean millions of deaths.

Scale up of AIDS treatment is driving unprecedented expansion of health delivery and, in the process, identifying critical challenges to health systems as well as practical solutions to address them. This report identifies many ways in which governments and global agencies must act to correct systems essential to delivery of health. In the area of antiretroviral drug access—a special focus of this report—our research found that in many countries drug registration, procurement, and supply management systems are inadequate, drug stock-outs are common, and most people are not being treated with ARV regimens that are consistent with recent WHO recommendations for improved first-line and standardized second-line treatment combinations.

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Organizations

  • International Treatment Preparedness Coalition (ITPC)