Ending AIDS by 2030: the importance of an interlinked approach and meaningful youth leadership

Journal of the International AIDS Society
Hayley S GleesonDoortje't Hart

Abstract

This commentary by authors from the Adolescent HIV Treatment Coalition calls for action to improve advocacy and service delivery for young people by leveraging the interlinkages between HIV and the broader development agenda. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development includes target 3.3 on ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030, and along with the 2016 Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS, this has led to a global renewal of political commitment to the HIV response. However, young people are still being left behind, and to provide an equitable and sustainable response to HIV we must ensure that we are meeting the needs of the 3.9 million young people living with HIV, and the millions more at risk. While HIV has its own target within the 2030 Agenda, efforts to end AIDS are inextricable from other goals and targets, such as on poverty eradication, education, gender equality and peace. To tackle HIV we must work beyond target 3.3 and provide a comprehensive response that addresses the underlying structural inequalities that impact adolescents and young people, ensuring that we enable the meaningful engagement of youth and adolescents as partners and leaders of sustainable development and the HIV response. Finally, it is necessary to...Continue Reading

References

Sep 14, 2012·The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·Mary Lou LindegrenGail E Kennedy
Dec 25, 2012·The Lancet Infectious Diseases·Stefan D BaralChris Beyrer
Aug 12, 2014·The Lancet Global Health·Tanya DohertyDavid Sanders
Aug 12, 2014·The Lancet Global Health·Stefano M Bertozzi, Juan-Pablo Gutiérrez
Dec 8, 2015·Journal of the International AIDS Society·Lucie D CluverMarissa Vicari
Jan 31, 2016·Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes : JAIDS·Lucie D CluverLorraine Sherr
May 12, 2017·Studies in Family Planning·Charlotte E WarrenJonathan Hopkins

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