AIDSfree appeal: Health Minister makes pledge for no new HIV cases in Britain after 2030

Health Secretary Matt Hancock
Daniel Hambury/@stellapicsltd
Oliver Poole31 January 2019

Health Secretary Matt Hancock will tomorrow commit to making the UK the first country in the world to have no new cases of HIV.

Speaking at the Evening Standard’s AIDSfree Cities Global Forum, the Secretary of State is to announce the Government’s commitment to reaching the target by 2030, and will pledge to direct funding to reduce the risk of people contracting or passing on the virus.

Mr Hancock has also committed a further £1.5 million in funding to the Elton John AIDS Foundation through the Standard’s AIDSfree campaign to help end the HIV epidemic. This is in addition to government support for the appeal through UK Aid Match, which is doubling all donations. UK Aid Match funding is provided by the Department for International Development.

“HIV and Aids are challenges that we must rise to,” Mr Hancock is expected to say. “The injustice, the unfairness, and the sadness they have brought must be tackled by us all.

“My generation grew up knowing Aids was a potential death sentence. That doesn’t have to be the case anymore.

“Thanks to medical breakthroughs, public health campaigns, breaking down stigma and better education, Aids is no longer a death sentence here.

“I feel proud that Britain has made such progress. But when I think about what’s going on elsewhere, I feel anger that our progress is not yet reflected around the world.

“We’re all part of the global solution to this global challenge. What we do locally in London, in Delhi, in Nairobi, in Maputo, in Kiev, in Atlanta, in other cities, has an impact globally.

“So today we’re setting a new goal: eradicating HIV transmission in England by 2030.”

The UK has had huge success in treating the disease. The estimated number of new infections acquired by men who have sex with men has halved from a peak of around 2,700 in 2012 to 1,200 in 2017. Of those diagnosed, 96 per cent are now on treatment and 94 per cent as a result have an “undetectable viral load”, where levels of the virus are so low it cannot be passed on.

To reach the 2030 target, Mr Hancock will direct £600,000 of funding. Officials will form an expert group to develop an action plan by the end of this year detailing how those most at risk as well as hard-to-reach groups can be reached and new infections eliminated.

Mr Hancock will join International Aid Secretary Penny Mordaunt at the AIDSfree Cities forum. Government ministers and civic representatives from six cities, including London, are to be joined by medical experts to form a plan of action on tackling HIV together to create an Aids-free future.

The event, at The Conduit, Mayfair and supported by Johnson & Johnson, will focus on the UN’s “90-90-90” targets, which aim to inform at least 90 per cent of people with HIV of their status, get 90 per cent of them on treatment and 90 per cent virally suppressed.

It marks the climax of the Evening Standard’s campaign in partnership with the Elton John AIDS Foundation.

Other than London, the cities the campaign has focused on — Delhi in India, Nairobi in Kenya, Maputo in Mozambique, Kiev in Ukraine and Atlanta in the US — are all yet to achieve the UN’s targets.

Mr Hancock said he was delighted that the Government would be supporting the Standard’s appeal through the £1.5 million of funding, which will go to the Elton John AIDS Foundation.

“I hail the extraordinary partnership between the Evening Standard and the Elton John AIDS Foundation,” he said.

“Their campaign will make a real difference to the lives of people across the world, and I am delighted to provide £1.5 million in support of their appeal.”

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