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Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative

What We've Accomplished

CHAI has made tremendous progress in providing access to lifesaving treatments for those living with HIV/AIDS in the developing world. Some of CHAI’s most noteworthy accomplishments include:

Access Programs

  • 1.4 million people are benefiting from medicines purchased under CHAI agreements, representing nearly half of all people living with HIV and on treatment in developing countries.
  • 71 countries have access to CHAI's negotiated prices for ARV drugs and diagnostics, representing more than 92% of people living with HIV globally. Of these countries, 50 are taking advantage of these prices.
  • CHAI has negotiated breakthrough ARV price reductions with 8 suppliers on over 40 formulations and negotiated significant price reductions with 12 suppliers for 16 HIV/AIDS diagnostic tests. CHAI's successive agreements have reduced the price of first-line treatments by 50%, pediatric medicines by 90%, and second-line HIV/AIDS medicines by a cumulative reduction of 30% in low income countries.
  • CHAI's first malaria price negotiations reduced the price of one ACT, an effective malaria drug, by 30% and reduced price volatility of artmesinin, the plant extract in ACTs, by 70%.
  • CHAI initiated a pilot subsidy on ACTs in Tanzania which reduced the price in targeted areas by 95% and increased uptake by approximately 45% for people of all ages - 62% for children under 5.

Country Programs

  • CHAI and UNITAID's partnership has reached 200,000 adults and children with $60 million worth of medicines, diagnostics, and therapeutic food. The Pediatric Program is supporting 2 out of every 3 children on treatment globally.
  • CHAI has launched 8 country-specific programs to bring care and treatment to rural communities , home to 70-80% of the developing world's population. These rural areas often lack access to basic primary health care, including HIV/AIDS treatment.
  • CHAI has supported country-specific strategies to increase human resources for health in 9 out of our 10 partner countries in Africa, with interventions including training, curriculum development, clinical mentoring, and recruiting.
  • CHAI is launching a new initiative focused on the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV in more than 6 countries. The program focuses on testing all pregnant women, increasing access to primary health and community-based outreach services, providing effective treatment, and offering safe infant feeding choices.
  • CHAI worked with the government of Malawi to help redesign its training approach for laboratory assistance from a three-year diploma course to a two-year certificate program, reducing the time required to deploy 84 new professionals to the nation's labs in rural areas.
  • CHAI assisted the government of Papua New Guinea in the Eastern Highlands in implementing a rural health care program. Early results show the number of pregnant women being tested in the district increased from 50% to more than 90%, while the number lost to follow-up after testing decreased from 74% to 0%.
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PROFILE

Seabata's Story
Seabata's Story
Persistent bouts of HIV-related sickness forced Seabata, a nine-year-old orphan, to miss a year of school. Thanks to antiretroviral treatment provided by the Clinton Foundation, he has happily returned.

Since the inception of the Pediatric Program, in partnership with UNITAID, CHAI had enabled 135,000 children to access treatment in 33 countries.