A Human Immune Deficiency Virus (HIV) Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Collaborative Regional Conference which comprises more than 100 health experts from 20 African countries opened yesterday in Accra.
PrEP is a critical HIV prevention tool that involves the use of antiretroviral medications by individuals, who are HIV negative but are at increased risk of acquiring the virus.
The participating countries include host nation, Ghana, Botswana, Cote d’Ivoire, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, South Africa, and South Sudan.
The rest are Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia and Senegal.
The programme sought to accelerate the scale-up of the impact of PrEP reprogramming in the African region in order to improve access, uptake, and effectiveness of PrEP as a key HIV prevention strategy.
Speaking at the opening, the Director General of Ghana AIDS Commission, Dr. Kyeremeh Atuahene, said Sub-Saharan Africa remained the region with the highest burden of the HIV and AIDS disease
He said the region had 660,000 of the 1.3 million new infections reported globally in 2022, adding that since 2010, HIV new infections reduced by 49 percent in the West and Central African Regions compared to 57 percent in the Eastern and Southern African Region.
“Declines in new infections differed markedly between countries and population groups while the overall declines in both regions were not significant enough to achieve the 2025 continental target,” Dr Atuahene said.
He said in spite of the demonstrable effectiveness of PrEP, its access was limited to selected populations due to financial constraints in most African countries, while UNAIDS reported that domestic funding for HIV and AIDS programmes increased from 50 percent in 2010 to 60 percent in 2022.
Dr. Atuahene said domestic investments in HIV and AIDS programmes have declined in some African countries.
“As international funding continues to shrink, domestic funding for HIV and AIDS must increase to ensure adequate investments in high-impact prevention, treatment and care services, social justice, and programmatic enablers,” he said.
Dr. Atuahene also called on African governments to come to realisation that external donors’ transition and sustainability plans underscored the need for country transition readiness.
The Country Director of UNAIDS, Mr Hector Sucilla Perez, said UNAIDS recognised the HIV PrEP as a game changer, considering its significant contribution to empowering individuals to protect themselves from infections, especially those at risk.
“By scaling up PrEP, we’re taking a giant leap towards achieving the target of ensuring that 95 percent of people at HIV risk use combination prevention. This action is fundamental to achieve our goal to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030,” he stated.
The Country Representative of the World Health Organisation, Dr Francis Kasolo Chisaka, in a speech read on his behalf, underscored the need to continue addressing the PrEP implementation constraints while sharing best practices, lessons learned, and cutting-edge methods for demand creation and delivery of PrEP.