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A shot of hope

A shot of hope

Time of India5 hours ago

New HIV medicine is powerful – but can everyone afford it?
A new medicine called lenacapavir has just been approved in the US to help stop people from getting HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. That's big news! Even though fewer people are getting HIV today than in the 1990s, around 13 lakh (1.3 million) people still get infected every year around the world.
Lenacapavir is special because you only need two shots a year – not a pill every day like older medicines. That's great for people who forget daily pills or feel embarrassed taking them. And it's almost 100% effective at stopping HIV in adults and teens.
But there's a big problem: the cost. In the US, it sells for over ₹23 lakh a year! Even rich countries find that hard to afford. The company that makes it, Gilead, is working with more than 100 poorer countries to help them make cheaper versions. Still, many African countries where HIV is most common may struggle to get it to the people who need it most.
Scientists have been trying to create a proper HIV vaccine for decades, but HIV keeps mutating – changing too fast for one shot to work. New mRNA vaccines (like the ones used for Covid) are being tested, but funding cuts in the US have slowed down this research.
That's why lenacapavir gives us hope. But hope only works if everyone, everywhere, can afford it.
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Trump aid cuts deal a blow to HIV prevention in Africa
Trump aid cuts deal a blow to HIV prevention in Africa

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Trump aid cuts deal a blow to HIV prevention in Africa

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