This World AIDS Day arrives amid unprecedented challenges, with this year’s theme, “Overcoming disruption, transforming the AIDS response,” emphasizing the urgent need to step up efforts globally.
Deepening Inequalities Threaten Progress
Global funding cuts risk reversing decades of progress, affecting programs that protect and empower women and girls. Yet, women living with HIV are not just survivors—they are leaders, advocates, and change-makers. Their voices must be amplified, their rights protected, and their leadership fully resourced.
Gender inequality remains a core driver of the AIDS pandemic. Women and girls represent 53% of the 40.8 million people living with HIV worldwide. In sub-Saharan Africa, adolescent girls are acquiring HIV at six times the rate of boys. Violence, limited healthcare access, and restricted leadership opportunities exacerbate the crisis, while women continue to shoulder the majority of care responsibilities.
Political Commitments to Women’s Health
The Beijing+30 Political Declaration underscores a commitment to advancing women’s health as part of the Beijing Platform for Action and pledges to safeguard the health rights of all women and girls.
UN Women Actions Across Africa and Central Asia
In 2024, UN Women expanded the leadership capacities of over 35,000 women across 36 countries. Programs focused on prevention and treatment were enhanced through community-based initiatives, including legal empowerment and outreach services. These efforts demonstrate how women and girls AIDS leadership transforms lives while strengthening communities.
Call to Action: Recommit and Resource Leadership
AIDS remains a pressing crisis, demanding renewed action. This World AIDS Day, global stakeholders must recommit to reversing disinvestment, prioritizing gender equality in the HIV pandemic, and maintaining political will for prevention, care, and treatment. Key measures include increasing domestic funding, ending violence against women, and supporting networks of women whose leadership is reshaping the AIDS response.
Empowering women is central to controlling the HIV pandemic. Strengthening UN Women leadership in HIV pandemic initiatives ensures that women and girls are not only protected but are active architects of solutions that safeguard health, rights, and communities.
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This story was first reported by UN Women. Read the full article here.

















