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Experts welcome the news that PEPFAR funding remains intact, but few details about how and where services will be ...
This article originally appeared on Advocate: Trump admin may end PEPFAR, replacing it with a program chiefly benefiting the ...
Documents obtained by the New York Times revealed that the US government has begun mapping out plans to shut down the ...
The program known as PEPFAR is one of the most effective and popular U.S. foreign aid projects in history, and the government ...
On 20 January 2025, the Trump administration called for a suspension of foreign aid, including global health initiatives such as the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).
PEPFAR has saved an estimated 26 million lives worldwide. Republicans want to end it and replace it into a for-profit ...
Last week, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief narrowly avoided a $400 million budget cut, thanks to bipartisan support. However, preserving PEPFAR should not be the ultimate goal; global ...
PEPFAR was launched in 2003 to stop the spread of HIV in Africa. Now, although some funding remains for the program, many of ...
Earlier versions of a spending cuts package passed through Congress targeted PEPFAR. But the White House, concerned about defections, agreed to spare the foreign aid program.
The US Senate has moved to spare the world’s biggest HIV treatment and prevention programme – which funds drugs and research in more than 50 countries – from $400m (£298m) of aid cuts imposed by ...
When Congress approved a Trump administration plan to take back $9 billion in funds they'd previously allocated to public media and foreign aid, there was just one program that lawmakers decided to ...
The White House backed off $400 million in immediate cuts it was proposing in the global fight against HIV and AIDS and ...