Rwanda marked the World AIDS Day on December 1, with a resolute call to action reflected in the theme "End AIDS, My Responsibility." ...
As we observe World AIDS Day, it is crucial to acknowledge the significant progress made in the fight against HIV/AIDS. However, complacency and stigma continue to hinder efforts to eliminate the ...
Kenya has made significant progress in its HIV response, with 98% of adults living with HIV receiving treatment by the end of ...
In 2015, Rwanda updated its HIV treatment guidelines, aligning with World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation. With WHO ...
Each life lost to AIDS is a life too many. As donor funds dry up, Africa needs new ways to fight this epidemic.
In 2023, Aids claimed 630,000 lives worldwide. 1.3 million individuals were newly infected with HIV. Almost half of these new ...
Global partners have supported Africa’s progress in HIV vaccine research and development. Organisations such as the US ...
In Uganda, women and girls are more affected by HIV. Out of 1.4 million people living with the disease, 860 000 are women and ...
To date, 95% of people with HIV in seven eastern and southern African countries are receiving antiretroviral treatment (Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Rwanda, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe).
A key provision of the new “Health Services Regulation” bill is stirring debate in Rwandan society. The country recorded over 8,000 cases of teenage pregnancies in 2024.
There is a remarkable story behind the way in which a lower-middle-income country, Rwanda, managed to contain an outbreak of one of the world’s most feared high-consequence pathogens, the Marburg ...