Tuesday, December 9, 2014

America's AIDS Miracle

By Michael Elliott

Originally published by Time on November 20, 2014

How the U.S. fought the disease by thinking big and staying smart

At my home in Washington, D.C., placed so that I see it every morning, is a photograph of Princess Adeyeo, a young Liberian woman I met in 2012. Princess had been a refugee during Liberia's civil war; when she returned there, she found that she was HIV-positive. But in Monrovia's John F. Kennedy Hospital she was put on a course of antiretroviral drugs (ARVs), which prevent mother-to-child transmission of the virus, and a few months before our visit she gave birth to a beautiful baby boy. He was HIV-negative, healthy.

Right now, of course, people associate Liberia with Ebola. It's right that we get mad about Ebola-mad that the world waited so long to tackle the outbreak; mad that poor, vulnerable societies don't have the resources needed to tackle infectious diseases. But we should remember too that in the past few years, Liberia-in fact, every country, rich or poor-has seen small miracles like the story of Princess and her son, and sees more of them each year.

In 2003, across all of sub-Saharan Africa, just 50,000 people were on ARVs, now more than 9 million are. There is no reason, in the next few years, that we cannot virtually end mother-to-child transmission of HIV in even the most challenging environments. Unheralded, we just passed a tipping point: in 2013, more people were added to the rolls of those on lifesaving treatment for HIV/AIDS than the number who were newly infected. That crossover of trend lines should mark the beginning of the end of AIDS.