What’s New

DREAMS: Partnership to Reduce HIV/AIDS in Adolescent Girls and Young Women

Adolescent Girls and Young Women Health for Life 360â—¦ (AGYW HFL 360â—¦) Initiative.

SAfAIDS is a partner in the DREAMS Consortium in Zimbabwe, and will implement the Adolescent Girls and Young Women Health for Life 360â—¦ (AGYW HFL 360â—¦) program in six (Bulawayo, Chipinge, Gweru, Makoni, Mazowe, Mutare) districts of Zimbabwe; contributing to the global DREAMS Initiative goal of reducing new HIV infections amongst AGYW through risk reduction and knowledge and skills building in a two-pronged approach: in-school and out-of-school community based. SAfAIDS is also Consortium Point of Contact (POC) for Bulawayo district.

The DREAMS (Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free, Mentored and Safe) Initiative is an ambitious $385 million partnership to reduce HIV infection among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in HIV priority areas within Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The 10 DREAMS countries, all in sub-Saharan Africa, accounted for nearly half of the new HIV infections that occurred among AGYW globally in 2014.

Girls and young women account for over 70 percent of new HIV infections among adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa, and nearly 1,000 AGYW are infected with HIV every day. Social isolation, economic disadvantage, discriminatory cultural norms, orphanhood, gender-based violence, and school drop-out all contribute to girls’ vulnerability to HIV. The DREAMS initiative goes beyond health to address these factors – a key to reaching the Sustainable Development Goal of ending AIDS by 2030.

The DREAMS Innovation Challenge [PDF, 1.7MB] seeks solutions to strengthening capacity for service delivery, keeping girls in secondary school, linking men to services, supporting pre-exposure prophylaxis, providing a bridge to employment, applying data to increase impact and offering sustainable solutions that may be scaled or replicated, and deploying solutions rapidly.

DREAMS builds upon the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID’s) decades of experience empowering young women and advancing gender equality across the sectors of global health, education, and economic growth. USAID partners with community, faith-based, and non-governmental organizations whose credibility within communities and capacity to mobilize significant numbers of volunteers allow USAID to address the structural inequalities impacting girls’ vulnerability to HIV.

Scaling up evidence-based interventions across multiple sectors will allow USAID to accelerate efforts to achieve an AIDS-free generation. By the end of 2017, DREAMS will achieve a 40 percent reduction in HIV incidence among women and girls ages 15–24 in the hardest-hit areas of the 10 DREAMS countries.

As the leading implementer of the DREAMS package, USAID will support:

  • HIV testing and counseling for nearly 528,000 AGYW
  • Education subsidies for almost 88,000 AGYW
  • Post-violence care for more than 113,000 AGYW survivors of gender-based violence
  • School-based HIV and violence prevention programs for approximately 684,000  AGYW
  • Pre-exposure prophylaxis for more than 10,500 AGYW
  • Condom promotion and provision for almost 1.7 million  AGYW and their partners
  • Improved access to youth friendly sexual and reproductive health services and the full range of contraceptive methods
  • Parenting/caregiver programs for more than 281,000 people

DREAMS is supported by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Girl Effect, Johnson & Johnson, Gilead Sciences, and ViiV Healthcare.

Additional Resources

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Top Scientist Trains Sights on Getting HIV Vaccine, Cure

NAIROBI, 22 September 2016 (allAfrica) – One Kenyan may soon place the country as the first nation whose citizen found a vaccine and a cure for HIV. Prof Thumbi Ndung’u – head of Kwazulu Natal Research Institute for Tuberculosis and HIV pathogenesis — has been studying the virus for 27 years, as well as tracking the scientific developments aimed at finding a cure and vaccine for AIDS.

He noted that in 2013, at one of the world’s greatest scientists’ gathering called Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, a “Mississippi baby” was announced to have been cured of HIV. The baby was born to a positive mother who had not received any treatment during pregnancy.

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Launch of the Village to Village- I Know My HIV Status- Do you? 90 x 90 x 90 Campaign in Marondera District

Launch of the Village to Village- I Know My HIV Status- Do you? 90 x 90 x 90 Campaign in Marondera District

Chief Seke and Chief Svosve during the launch session

 

On the 2nd of August 2016, SAfAIDS in partnership with Seke Rural Home based Care with support from UNAIDS ESA, launched the Rock leadership 90 V2V campaign in Marondera district at Chief Svosve’s rural homestead. More than 350 people attended the event. The launch was also used as a platform to provide integrated HTS, targeting men, women, adolescents and children from the community to know their HIV status.<p?>

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SAfAIDS Giving a voice to young people at the National Youth Games

SAfAIDS Giving a voice to young people at the National Youth Games

CHINHOYI, 18 August 2016 – SAfAIDS is continuing with exhibitions, edutainment activities, one on one sessions and group interactions with young people at the National Youth games in Chinhoyi. SAfAIDS is one of the major stakeholders who took part in the Youth in Sports conference that took place on Wednesday the 17th of August at the Chinhoyi University of Technology.

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Positive Talk Live Chat: The Cheating quandary!!!!

Positive Talk Live Chat: The Cheating quandary!!!!

SAfAIDS Media Desk, 19 August 2016 – Against the backdrop of many reported cases of partner cheating that are being witnessed on a day today basis, Positive Talk Live Chat put this issue for discussion in order to bring to light why the trend seem to be increasing at an alarming rate. It was revealed that in the modern day, cheating has taken a whole new twist, whereby it is much harder to catch a cheating spouse because they don’t have to stay out late making an excuse. No funny/ suspicious behaviour is revealed around their spouses; thereby cheating partners are rarely caught as they play their games smartly.

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South Africa: Number of HIV+ Babies Born in SA Less Than Half UK Guardian’s

South Africa: Number of HIV+ Babies Born in SA Less Than Half UK Guardian's

PRETORIA, 6 September 2016 (allAfrica) – An old figure quoted by the UK’s Guardian newspaper overstates the share of HIV+ mothers transmitting the virus to their babies in South Africa. Reporting on Mothers to Mothers, a non-profit support group for HIV positive mothers, the Guardian’s Global Development network for professional reported that “in South Africa, mother-to-child transmission of HIV has fallen to 3.5%”.The Guardian

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Africa: Global Fund Rolls Out Strategic Actions for Gender Equality Initiative

Africa: Global Fund Rolls Out Strategic Actions for Gender Equality Initiative

NEW YORK, 7 September 2016 (allAfrica) – As part of its new strategy for 2017-2022, the Global Fund has placed increased emphasis on rights and gender. One of the four strategic objectives focuses directly on promoting and protecting human rights and gender equality, aiming to scale up programs to support women and girls (including programs to advance sexual and reproductive health and rights) and invest to reduce health inequities (including gender and age-related disparities).

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Stigma Deters Adolescents and Young Women With HIV From Accessing Contraceptives

Stigma deter Adollescents

NAIROBI, 15 September 2016 (allAfrica) – Adolescent girls and young women infected with HIV infections face stigma and discrimination when they seek reproductive health services such as family planning.

A group of adolescent girls and young women living with HIV under the auspices of a group called Sauti Skika say due to this unmet need for family planning, it makes them more vulnerable to unplanned pregnancies and at risk of reinfections.

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