IAS 2009: At Opening of International AIDS Conference in South Africa, Scientists Warn against Cutting Back Funding for AIDS Programs
- Details
- Category: HIV Treatment
- Published on Tuesday, 21 July 2009 13:49
- Written by IAS

As more than 5,000 researchers, people with HIV/AIS and HIV community advocates gathered in Cape Town, South Africa for the 5th IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment an AIDS (IAS 2009), July 19 - 22, 2009, speakers at the open ceremonies warned against a loss of momentum in the global fight against the HIV pandemic. There is heightened concern that due to the global recession, governments and other donors are scaling back on their financial support for healthcare delivery systems.
Scientists Warn Against Retrenchment on AIDS
As 5th IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention Opens, Leaders Urge Continued Momentum towards Universal Access in Africa and Globally
19 July 2009 -- Cape Town, South Africa -- Amidst a lingering global recession and indications that world leaders are retreating on previous commitments to universal access to HIV prevention and treatment, the more than 5,000 AIDS researchers, implementers and community leaders gathered in Cape Town for the 5th IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2009) warned of dire public health consequences resulting from a retrenchment on the global fight against AIDS. This warning came at the opening of IAS 2009, a biennial scientific meeting organized by the International AIDS Society (IAS) in partnership with Dira Sengwe.
"Despite the recession, the global response to HIV - including the commitment of sufficient resources to achieve universal access to HIV prevention and treatment, fully fund AIDS research and strengthen underlying health systems - cannot be put in a holding pattern," said IAS President Dr. Julio Montaner, who is IAS 2009 Chair and Director of the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS in Vancouver, Canada. "If we don't move forward, we will rapidly lose ground. That is the reality we face at this pivotal moment in HIV scale-up," he added.
For IAS 2009 Local Co-Chair Dr. Hoosen (Jerry) Coovadia, the conference is taking place at the right time and place. "Without a doubt, AIDS occupies a pivotal position in South Africa's history, having helped to frame our country's political, social and economic life in the post-apartheid era," he said. "With reports of interruptions in drug supply and shortages here and elsewhere foremost on our minds, we must ensure that health delivery systems on our continent are effective and adequately funded in order to prevent needless deaths and countless preventable infections," he added. Dr. Coovadia is Chairman of Dira Sengwe and Scientific Director of the Doris Duke Medical Research Institute at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban.
The IAS Conference series focuses on the translation of research into practice, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. This emphasis is further reflected this year by the addition of a new conference track on operations research, which involves the ongoing evaluation of programme implementation to strengthen service delivery and identify best practice. The notion of "learning by doing" will be the focus of a number of conference sessions.
Opening Program
The emphasis on the real-world application of science was also reflected in today's opening session, which began with welcoming remarks by the conference Co-Chairs and South Africa's Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe, followed by a community welcome by Viyuseka Dubula, General Secretary of the Treatment Action Campaign in South Africa. In her remarks, Ms. Dubula highlighted progress and challenges since the XIII International AIDS Conference took place in Durban in 2000, an event that is widely credited with having focused global attention on geographic disparities in HIV treatment and jumpstarting the move to expand access in low-income countries.
The opening session also featured a scientific keynote address by 2008 Nobel Laureate and IAS Governing Council member Professor Françoise Barré-Sinoussi entitled, Can the Establishment and Persistence of HIV Reservoirs Ever be Controlled? Viral reservoirs - hidden mostly in subpopulations of latently infected resting memory CD4+ T cells - constitute the major obstacle to eliminating HIV from the body. In her remarks, Prof. Barré-Sinoussi explained how HIV persists in patients treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy and posed some of the most vexing questions facing AIDS scientists and clinicians today, including: What are the main reservoirs of HIV in the body? What are the mechanisms responsible for their establishment and persistence? Which strategies can be proposed accordingly?
AIDS Free World Co-Director Stephen Lewis gave a second keynote address entitled, Scientistsas Activists. Mr. Lewis argued that what is desperately needed today is unrelenting and informed voices of advocacy, and he called upon the scientific community to use both their scientific expertise and their voices to respond to the pandemic.
A webcast of the opening session will be available on the conference website as of late Sunday.
Program to Highlight Other Key Research and Implementation Issues
IAS 2009 will explore issues at the top of the AIDS research and policy agendas, including: the impact of HIV-specific funding on broader efforts to strengthen health systems; disparities in normative guidelines on when to start HIV treatment for people living in the global North versus the South; and the emerging concept of treatment as prevention, which recognizes the added preventive value of antiretroviral therapy. Four special sessions will examine other key issues:
- Scaling up Biomedical Prevention and Treatment Interventions - The Critical Role of Social Science, Law and Human Rights (Monday, 20 July, 13:00)
- U.S. Global HIV Policy, Research and Implementation Under a New Administration, featuring NIAID Director Anthony Fauci and newly confirmed U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Eric Goosby (Monday, 20 July, 13:00)
- What Have We Learned from DART (Development of AntiRetroviral Therapy in Africa)? (Tuesday, 21 July, 07:00)
- Drug and Alcohol Dependence - New Advances and Ongoing Challenges in HIV Treatment and Prevention (Tuesday, 21 July, 13:00)
7/21/09
Source
IAS 2009 Conference Organizers. Scientists Warn Against Retrenchment on AIDS. Press Release. July 19, 2009.