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FACT: 8 million people are on life-saving AIDS treatment today, up from just 300,000 in 2002.

But if we don’t act now to stop devastating budget cuts to global AIDS programs, millions of lives could be at risk. 300,000 people won’t receive HIV/AIDS treatment. 21,000 babies could be born with HIV. 124,000 babies could become AIDS orphans.

If we go over the fiscal cliff, all the cuts would be equally applied, but not all the cuts would be equally felt.

Tell Congress we have to protect the world’s most vulnerable in the fight against AIDS.

    Dear Congress,

    Protect our investment in life-saving development programs, such as those that fight HIV/AIDS, childhood diseases, and hunger, by preserving the International Affairs account.

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      The Fight

      More than 34 million people around the globe are living with HIV, but only half of those eligible for life-saving treatment receive it. Last year alone, 2.5 million people around the world were newly infected with the virus. We can beat this disease, but only if we recommit to the fight today.

      • Nearly 7000
        people were infected with HIV each day in 2011
      • 330,000
        infants and children were infected with HIV in 2011
      6 out of 10
      6 out of every 10 HIV positive people in sub-Saharan Africa are women
      34 million
      people around the globe are HIV positive
      In 2011, 2.5 million people were infected with HIV

      The beginning of the end of AIDS
      starts with you.

      Time to get wonky: Learn about Option B+, an anti-HIV ‘treatment for life’

      AIDS

      Time to get wonky: Learn about Option B+, an anti-HIV ‘treatment for life’

      What have prevention of mother-to-child (PMTCT) efforts to-date in Malawi looked like, and how has the introduction of Option B+ changed that picture?

      Until 2011, Malawi had separate PMTCT and adult treatment programs. There were many barriers to scaling up PMTCT, including a lack of access to CD4 counts testing, supply chain challenges, and very limited follow-up for infants exposed to HIV. The Malawi Government’s introduction of Option B+ was a calculated decision designed to improve health outcomes by streamlining, simplifying and integrating health services, thus eliminating many of the barriers to PMTCT.

      Charlize Theron on AIDS: ‘We must all be responsible’

      AIDS

      Charlize Theron on AIDS: ‘We must all be responsible’

      ONE supporter, activist and award-winning actress Charlize Theron appeared this morning before lawmakers to talk about her work against AIDS  and celebrate the 10th anniversary of PEPFAR. During a breakfast organized by ONE and UNAIDS, which took place at the US Capitol Visitor Center, Charlize joined Sens. John Boozman, R-Ark., Mike Johanns, R-Neb., and Reps. David Cicilline,

      ‘My life was a secret’: Confessions of an HIV+ activist

      AIDS

      ‘My life was a secret’: Confessions of an HIV+ activist

      Jamie Gentille, an HIV/AIDS advocate who works with organizations like ONE and the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, shares her experience growing up HIV-positive.  When I was a kid, my life was a secret.  I couldn’t tell my friends that I contracted HIV from a blood transfusion during open-heart surgery when I was three. I couldn’t

       

      The Progress

      An AIDS diagnosis no longer means a death sentence. More than 8 million people are on life-saving treatment. And leading scientists now agree that we could see the beginning of the end of AIDS.

      It’s possible to live in a world where no child is born with HIV – but not without your help.

      • 8 million
        More than 8 million people are on antiretroviral treatment worldwide
      • 40%
        New HIV infections among kids have dropped by over 40% since 2002
      6.2 million
      Number of people on treatment in sub-Saharan Africa in 2011, up from just 50,000 in 2002
      Roughly 900
      infections per day
      The number of new HIV infections among children has dropped from more than 1,500 new infections per day in 2002 to 900 per day in 2011

      The beginning of the end of AIDS
      starts with you.