TWICE A YEAR, ONE INJECTION: A NEW ERA IN HIV PREVENTION AND TREATMENT
HIV
remains a significant health threat, despite the increasing availability of
effective HIV prevention tools such as oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).
The availability of another option for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has the
potential to increase uptake and effective use of PrEP and of HIV prevention
overall, as it allows people, especially key populations who are always
stigmatised, to choose a method that they prefer.
The
WHO 2025 updated recommendations on HIV prevention, treatment, and service
delivery focus on interventions that can improve health outcomes, increase
equity, and strengthen programme efficiency. These recommendations aim to
impact Prevention, treatment, and care, as well as to prevent HIV-associated
TB, improve service delivery and integration, and enhance adherence.
Summary
of the new recommendations to expand access and improve outcomes
The
latest WHO recommendations are designed to optimise health outcomes, streamline
delivery and address persistent barriers to prevention and care. It focuses mainly
on neglected people in service delivery, including adolescents and young
people, key populations and people with advanced HIV disease. The guidance emphasises
integration, simplification, choice and equity.
This is a great development in kicking out HIV in our societies; however, the challenge often faced, especially among the key population, is unequal access.
Resources:
- Overview
of WHO recommendations on HIV and sexually transmitted infection testing,
prevention, treatment, care and service delivery. Geneva: World Health
Organization; 2025. https://doi.org/10.2471/B09471.
- Guidelines on
lenacapavir for HIV prevention and testing strategies for long-acting
injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240111608.