Litia Cava
24 May, 2021, 3:00 pm
Executive director of Rainbow Pride Foundation (RPF) and the Pacific Sexual and Gender Diversity Network (PSGDN) Isikeli Vulavou. Picture: JOVESA NAISUA
Community-centered approaches are needed in Fiji to strengthen the declining HIV response, says Rainbow Pride Foundation (RPF) executive director Isikeli Vulavou.
He highlighted this during a consultation for civil society organisations (CSOs) organised by UNAIDS Pacific based in Suva.
During the talks, the CSOs said HIV response had disappeared from the priorities of Pacific governments.
“People living with HIV (PLHIV) and key populations need to be in the centre of HIV programs in Fiji and the Pacific,” he said.
Press Release – UNAIDS Pacific Office The HIV response has disappeared from the priorities of governments of the Pacific. This is the consensus made by civil society organizations engaged in a series of consultations organized by the UNAIDS Pacific based in Suva. These consultations …
“The HIV response has disappeared from the priorities of governments of the Pacific”. This is the consensus made by civil society organizations engaged in a series of consultations organized by the UNAIDS Pacific based in Suva. These consultations were part of the review of progress of current political commitments and advisories for the upcoming United Nations General Assembly high-level meeting on HIV and AIDS that will place from 8 to 10 June 2021. The high-level meeting will review the progress made in reducing the impact of HIV since the last United Nations General Assembly high-level meeting on HIV and AIDS in 2016 and the General Assembly expects to adopt a new political declaration to
HIV Remains A Health Concern: Civil Societies Speak Up For Upcoming High-Level Meeting On HIV/AIDS scoop.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scoop.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.