Global Health Watch: PEPFAR Downgraded, PrEP Access Threatened, and State Dept Reorganized

April 25, 2025: Issue 13

This week saw a significant reorganization of the State Department and a delay in the foreign assistance “review process”. There were also new threats to PrEP programs, critical HIV services and health systems, and research in South Africa. Read on for key developments, implications, and resources for action.

Department of State Overhauled

The US administration initiated a significant reorganization of the US State Department, aiming to consolidate its 28 divisions into 15. This restructuring is part of a broader effort to streamline operations and reduce redundancy within the department. The plan situates the Bureau of Global Health Security and Diplomacy Office, which includes PEPFAR, under the undersecretary of State for economic growth and environment. This goes against the 2003 law that created PEPFAR, which placed PEPFAR and its Ambassador reporting directly to the Secretary of State.

​At the same time, the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) implemented a “Defend the Spend” initiative, which imposes stringent new protocols on disbursing federal healthcare grants. The policy requires detailed justifications for each payment, effectively delaying or halting funding for programs such as salaries for healthcare workers at federal health centers. ​ 

IMPLICATIONS: The reorganization and funding constraints could affect the delivery of essential services, including those related to HIV prevention and treatment, both domestically and internationally and continue to raise concerns about potential disruptions to critical health services and the overall impact on public health infrastructure. And removing PEPFAR from the direct line to the Secretary of State potentially diminishes the program’s authority and visibility. 

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Foreign Aid Review Extended

The administration extended its supposed “foreign aid review” by an additional 30 days, pushing the conclusion to May 20. This follows the initial 90-day pause initiated by executive orders said to be assessing the alignment of US foreign assistance with the administration’s “America First” policy. An internal State Department email from Jeremy Lewin, the newly appointed Director of Foreign Assistance, indicated that the additional time would be used for further bureau feedback and to align recommendations with the upcoming budget proposal.​ 

IMPLICATIONS: This extension continues amid continued uncertainty around HIV and global health programs. Organizations reliant on this funding remain in limbo, hindering their ability to plan and deliver essential programs and services. The extension also raises concerns about the potential for further cuts or restructuring of foreign assistance. 

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Federal Workers to be Reclassified (“Schedule F”) to Remove Their Protections

Approximately 50,000 federal employees will be reclassified under “Schedule F,” a designation that would strip them of longstanding civil service protections and render them “at-will” employees. These actions target career staff in policy-influencing roles across agencies like the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), aligning with the administration’s broader agenda to reshape the federal workforce and consolidate executive control.  

IMPLICATIONS: This reclassification could undermine the nonpartisan expertise essential for effective governance, particularly in areas like health research and service delivery. The potential impact on global health initiatives is significant, as the loss of experienced personnel could disrupt programs critical to HIV prevention and pandemic preparedness. 

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South Africa HIV Gains at Risk

Many news outlets and advocates this week are calling attention to South Africa’s HIV response, which is in crisis as the US funding freeze takes effect. Francois Venter argues in an opinion piece that key HIV services are collapsing, including community outreach, PrEP access, and clinic operations, leaving thousands without care. A pre-print journal article, The cost of the plunge, estimates that the termination of PEPFAR-supported services could result in over 13,000 additional deaths and more than 25,000 new infections each year in South Africa. The South African government’s response has been criticized for its lack of coordination and contingency planning, with civil society advocates calling for urgent action, increased transparency, and new domestic investments to prevent the collapse of two decades of progress against HIV.  

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NIH Pauses HIV Research in South Africa

The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) has restricted research programs in South Africa from enrolling new participants in its major HIV clinical trial networks. South Africa is a leader in trial participation and lab analysis, has been a critical partner in advancing HIV prevention and treatment strategies and has one of the world’s largest HIV epidemics. Experts, including Glenda Gray of the South African Medical Research Council, warn that this action is “petty and punitive,” especially given South Africa’s longstanding contributions to US and global HIV guidance. 

IMPLICATIONS: This NIH decision, coupled with foreign aid cuts and the dismantling of USAID, risks sidelining one of the most capable research partners in the HIV field. It could slow progress in biomedical innovation, disrupt current trial pipelines, and further erode trust in US global health partnerships—at a moment when scientific collaboration and inclusive research are more critical than ever. 

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PrEP and Prevention at Risk in the US 

In the US, arguments just began in the Supreme Court on the Kennedy v. Braidwood Management case, which is challenging the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) mandate that requires insurers to cover certain preventive services, including PrEP, at no cost. The case is brought by fundamentalist Christian business owners who oppose no-cost PrEP on religious grounds.  

IMPLICATIONS: If the Court strikes down the mandate, insurers may no longer be required to fully cover services recommended since 2010, including new long-acting PrEP options. This could severely limit access, raise out-of-pocket costs, and threaten hard-won public health gains in HIV prevention and beyond. 

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What We’re Reading

Resources

Global Health Watch: Leadership in Flux, Further Cuts to Foreign Aid, a Pandemic Accord

April 18, 2025: Issue 12

Just three months since the US presidential inauguration, and still more developments affecting the future of HIV prevention, global health leadership, and pandemic preparedness. From African women leaders demanding action to save HIV prevention, to escalating US foreign aid cuts and the fragile progress of WHO’s Pandemic Agreement, this issue break down what advocates need to know now. Read on.

Foreign Assistance Leadership in Flux

In another chaotic series of developments around foreign assistance, an internal State Department memo reports that Jeremy Lewin—a 28-year-old tech entrepreneur with no prior government or foreign assistance experience—has now been named Acting Director of the State Department’s Office of Foreign Assistance, following a few weeks as the Acting USAID Administrator—all in the wake of Pete Marocco’s brief, but devastating tenure in both positions. Lewin was a key figure in the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the dismantling of USAID. He is now overseeing what remains of US foreign assistance following USAID’s absorption by the Department of State.

IMPLICATIONS: Lewin’s inexperience and previous role raise serious concerns about the future of US global health and development, especially as so few staff remain with relevant expertise and relationships with governments and implementation partners.

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Further Cuts to Foreign Aid

The administration is advancing major efforts to continue cutting US foreign aid and dismantling USAID. A draft Fiscal Year 2026 budget proposes cutting the State Department by nearly 50%—over $30 billion—with foreign aid reduced by up to 75%, including the closure of at least 27 US diplomatic missions, primarily in Africa and Europe. At the same time, the White House is preparing a formal request to Congress to cut $9 billion of previously approved funds. The cuts are aimed at USAID, State Department and public broadcasting programs. A KFF analysis examined the implications of the cuts, and among other assessments, found HIV-related programs are disproportionately impacted.

IMPLICATIONS: If enacted, these cuts would deliver a major blow to US global health and development leadership, severely undermining programs focused on HIV and disease prevention, and further accelerating the administration’s efforts to dismantle USAID. As AVAC’s Mitchell Warren said in Science“We are in the middle of a massive earthquake. And when buildings fall, we can’t just build back what we had before. We need a whole new global health funding architecture, but we won’t be able to build it fast enough to avoid significant harm.”

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Restructuring HHS

A leaked HHS budget proposal this week outlines significant cuts to HIV programs in the US, including the elimination of the Ending the HIV/AIDS Epidemic Initiative (which was, ironically, started during President Trump’s first term and delivering results) and the Minority AIDS Initiative. The Ryan White Program under the new proposal would continue but with reduced funding, and the CDC prevention programs, including PrEP, face uncertainty due to consolidation. NIH’s HIV research funding could drop by 40%, jeopardizing progress in the fight against HIV.

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WHO Warns of Budget Implications

At a press conference this week, WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus confirmed that health services in over 100 countries are being “severely disrupted” following the US’s withdrawal from the WHO and drastic cuts to foreign aid. He confirmed that there has been no formal dialogue yet between the new US administration and WHO. In his remarks, Tedros urged governments to protect the poorest and resist cutting public health funding. Moreover, WHO faces a $2.5 billion budget gap, which is forcing drastic downsizing and a massive restructuring of the agency.
 
IMPLICATIONS: In addition to the WHO, the US has also pulled out of pandemic treaty negotiations, citing false claims about sovereignty. This all points to reduced international pandemic preparedness, weakened surveillance systems, reduced access to vaccines, and growing health inequities—particularly in low-income countries most dependent on WHO support.

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Pandemic Agreement Reached

Just over five years since the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the world and after several years of negotiating, WHO member states finally reached agreement this week on a draft pandemic treaty that, if ratified, would be a legally binding accord that lays the foundation for future pandemic prevention and response, including real-time sharing of vaccines, treatments, and diagnostics. For three years member states negotiated critical issues, with pressure from civil society to embrace key provisions on equity and intellectual property. Some of those provisions have been addressed in the final text, with the precise language used remaining contentious. The agreement is expected to be adopted at the upcoming World Health Assembly (WHA) meeting in May. However, negotiations on an Annex detailing the new Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing mechanism will continue with the aim of concluding at next year’s WHA. Sixty countries must adopt the Accord for it to be in full force.
 
IMPLICATIONS: The agreement marks a major step forward for multilateralism and health security—even as the US remains absent from negotiations. Advocates warn that without civil society input and sustained investment, including restored US funding, the agreement’s promise may fall short.

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NIH Indirect Costs and University Pushback

The administration’s proposal to cap indirect costs for National Institutes of Health (NIH) research grants at 15% is being challenged with lawsuits by universities and others. This week, several organizations representing research institutions announced efforts to develop alternative models for a streamlined, transparent approach to funding indirect costs that balance efficiency and sustainability. Specific proposals are still under discussion.

READ: Universities Begin Search for Indirect-cost Fix that Might Assuage Trump Administration—STAT

African Women Lead: A Call to Sustain HIV Prevention

The African Women Prevention Community Accountability Board (AWPCAB) issued a statement calling on global health institutions, African governments, donor countries, the private sector, and philanthropies to urgently address critical gaps to ensure a sustainable HIV response. AWPCAB is led by a number of AVAC partners and staff and represents a collective of women and girls committed to advancing HIV prevention.  The statement defines priority actions from local production to domestic financing and more. As they state clearly: “There is no ending AIDS by 2030 without prevention.”
 
READAWPCAB Calls for Urgent Action to Safeguard HIV Prevention and Centre Meaningful Community Engagement

It’s STI Awareness Week

In a new video, AVAC’s Alison Footman breaks down where we are in the fight against STIs, what we’ve gained, what’s at risk, and what happens next.

Watch the Video

What We’re Reading

Resources

Despite USG Global Health Collapse, Here Are Several Data Trackers To Support Your Advocacy

With the collapse in support from the US Presidential administration in global health, data sources tracking the HIV response have been lost, from HIV incidence and prevalence to PrEP uptake and disparities among key populations and regions of the world. Below, AVAC has identified dashboards, data trackers and other resources to inform your advocacy.

Tracking PrEP Access

  • Impact of the Stop-Work Order on PrEP
    On PrEPWatch, this webpage outlines the consequences of PEPFAR stop-work orders on HIV prevention, detailing disruptions to PrEP services, stalled product rollouts (including CAB), halted research, and workforce reductions. It includes downloadable slides to support advocacy and analysis.
  • Tracking Lenacapavir Rollout
    This new online tracker monitors all the key steps, timelines and responsible stakeholders needed to ensure equitable access to injectable lenacapavir (LEN) for PrEP. Find it on PrEPWatch.

Tracking the Impact of US Government Funding Cuts

  • PEPFAR Funding Freeze
    This webpage shares resources developed by a new global civil society coalition, Community Health and HIV Advocates Navigating Global Emergencies (CHANGE) on various impacts of the freeze.
  • Impact of US Funding Cuts on the Global AIDS Response
    UNAIDS’ weekly situation report provides an overview and up-close country snapshots of the impact to service delivery and human resources.

Tracking Court Action

These trackers and additional resources are included in our weekly Global Health Watch newsletter along with the latest policy developments and their implications to keep advocates informed, prepared and connected.

Global Health Watch: Tariffs, NIH Cuts, Black-led HIV Research Agenda & PEPFAR’s Legacy

April 11, 2025: Issue 11

This week brought major developments for global health: new tariffs on pharmaceuticals are pending, a court blocks the cap on NIH indirect costs, and worries a leadership vacuum at the CDC is a cause for yet more concern. Amid the chaos, advocates rallied—defending PEPFAR’s legacy in Congress and launching a national Black-centered, Black-led HIV research agenda. 

Read on for highlights and implications and be sure to check out the What We’re Reading section, which is full of great pieces this week. 

Tariffs and HIV

As the administration created even more chaos with the on-again, off-again sweeping tariffs and threats of major trade wars, a new report highlights concern and potential effects on health systems—including HIV prevention and care. Finished pharmaceuticals are temporarily exempt, but essential components like diagnostic tests, syringes, excipients and other medical supplies may not be protected, raising alarms about cost increases and supply chain delays. And on Tuesday, the President announced at a dinner that new tariffs targeting pharmaceuticals are now officially “coming soon.” 

IMPLICATIONS: If global pharmaceutical manufacturers move their operations to avoid tariffs, FDA inspections—with many fewer resources in the wake of last week’s mass layoffs—could delay approval of new products. Clinics, hospitals and other health systems may face increased costs, limited availability of products and a more fragile supply chain.  

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NIH Overhead Cuts Blocked by Court 

A federal judge issued a permanent injunction blocking an administration policy that would have capped indirect cost payments at 15% for both new and existing NIH grants. The policy threatened to cut billions in support for universities, academic centers, and research institutions—jeopardizing infrastructure, staff, and ongoing studies. While the administration may appeal the ruling, it marks an important step in what could be a long legal battle over the future of federal research funding. At the same time, massive uncertainty remains at NIH, given the numerous staff and grant terminations. 

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US CDC Uncertainty

Internal memos reported by Inside Medicine indicate that the US CDC currently has no legally-required Acting Director, which leaves the agency in a leadership vacuum at a critical time. Dr. Susan Monarez, who previously served in an acting capacity, became ineligible for that role after being nominated for the permanent position on March 24. In the meantime, scientists and advocates are calling on federal and state health leaders to protect the nation’s only STD reference laboratory and reinstate over 30 scientists affected by the recent reduction in force (RIF) amid a growing public health crisis of rising STDs and drug-resistant infections. Colleen Kelley, chair of the HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA) testified before Congress Wednesday advocating for the CDC’s prevention division, continued funding in HIV care, prevention and research. 

IMPLICATIONS: Without a legally authorized director, decisions normally reserved for CDC leadership—including the acceptance of upcoming vaccine recommendations by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)—must now be made by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic. This raises urgent concerns about legal compliance, scientific integrity, and public trust, particularly as thousands of CDC staff have been laid off and critical public health decisions loom.  

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Making the Case for PEPFAR 

On Tuesday, EGPAF’s Catherine Connor and Ambassador Mark Dybul testified at the US House Appropriations Subcommittee hearing on PEPFAR, issuing powerful affirmations of the program’s life-saving impact—and the bipartisan commitment to its future. Lawmakers from both sides showed strong support for PEPFAR. They also shared an interest in innovation—including the promise of long-acting PrEP—to strengthen the program’s next phase. Their testimony came at the same time that Michel Sidibe and colleagues published new data in a Lancet Correspondence underscoring PEPFAR’s legacy—in saving an estimated 26 million lives, and also in catalyzing a 212% increase in domestic health investment across PEPFAR-supported African countries, since 2004. In the same issue, Lucie Cluver published updated modeling of the impact of potential PEPFAR cuts

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A Black-led Agenda for HIV Research

PrEP in Black America (PIBA) and more than 80 Black researchers, scientists, and community leaders, launched the first-ever national Black HIV Prevention Research Agenda this week, a call to action and a blueprint to end HIV in Black communities. The agenda centers Black voices, leadership, and lived experience to influence how HIV prevention research is conducted, funded, and implemented. AVAC’s John Meade described the launch as a moment of “reckoning and resistance,” pointing to the urgent need to protect public health infrastructure, advance equity, and resist political threats to HIV research and LGBTQ+ rights. This domestic research agenda importantly complements the People’s Research Agenda that AVAC and global partners released last October. The two documents provide a truly global, community-led perspective on the future of HIV prevention research. 

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The Future of Injectable Lenacapavir for PrEP

Clinical Infectious Diseases covered two viewpoints offering different perspectives on the future of injectable lenacapavir for PrEP—and the future of HIV prevention more broadly.

What We’re Reading

Update on AVAC vs. Department of State

Two months ago, AVAC sued the US government over an Executive Order that froze all foreign assistance. 
 
Since then, the court has ordered the government to restart certain payments and uphold its legal obligations. But delays, resistance, and appeals continue—putting global health, HIV prevention, and US credibility on the line. 
 
Read our update on the case and watch our latest episode of PxPulse Live where AVAC’s Executive Director Mitchell Warren and Public Citizen litigator Lauren Bateman unpack the latest legal developments.

Resources

A Fight for Global Health and Justice: An update on AVAC vs. US State Department

Just two months ago, AVAC led other organizations to sue the US government including the President, the US State Department and USAID, seeking emergency relief from an Executive Order that inhumanely froze all funding for foreign assistance. This case may well help to determine the future of foreign assistance, executive overreach, and the role of evidence, facts, and values in US policy. 

“[This lawsuit] is among the first cases litigating the increasingly important issue of the government’s power to issue mass terminations of grants. We’ve seen the administration employ this strategy across a host of agencies. And we’re proud to be in the fight to establish that these sort of careless, reasonless, mass terminations are illegal.” — Public Citizen’s Lauren Bateman 

Upon filing the case, the US District Court judge immediately granted a temporary restraining order requiring the government to reinstate frozen foreign aid and, shortly after, ruled that it must pay for work already completed by NGOs and other contractors. Despite the court’s clear directive, the government delayed compliance for weeks. It wasn’t until mid-March that payments began to trickle out. Several thousand payments for past work have been processed over the past several weeks, but the government reported to the court on Friday that 6,000 payments for overdue invoices are still to be processed. 

The judge also ordered the government to spend congressionally appropriated funds for foreign assistance – an action they are actively resisting. And last week, they appealed to a higher court, seeking reversal of the order they must spend the full amount of funds that Congress appropriated. 

In the latest episode of our PxPulse Live, our video podcast, AVAC’s Executive Director Mitchell Warren and Lauren Bateman, litigator at Public Citizen, which is representing us in the case, unpack the latest developments in this landmark case, including early wins, legal hurdles, and what lies ahead. 

New: PxPulse Live – Lawsuit Wins and What’s at Stake 

This case stands not only for the principle of fair process but for the belief that global health is a public good worth protecting, funding, and fighting for. 

We hope you will listen and share our video widely. The world is watching—and we won’t back down. 

Global Health Watch: CDC, NIH, FDA Hit Hard as HHS Begins Workforce Reductions

April 4, 2025: Issue 10

This week’s issue covers drastic cuts across the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), where a dramatic 20% downsizing effort is underway. On Tuesday, HHS began issuing reduction-in-force (RIF) notices across its agencies, triggering mass layoffs at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The ripple effects are vast—gutting HIV prevention, infectious disease research, and vaccine development, while threatening the stability and viability of the workforce that sustains US public health and biomedical research. Read AVAC’s statement on HHS here.  

This issue also covers growing legal, institutional, and global responses to these actions. 

Reduction-in-Force Notification at HHS

Tuesday, HHS began issuing reduction-in-force (RIF) notices across its agencies, with deep cuts at the CDC, NIH, and FDA. This effort is part of a sweeping reorganization announced by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. last week, which aims to downsize HHS by 20%. Framed as a “painful period”, HHS leadership claim to be refocusing the agencies on rising chronic disease. Read more below for details.  

IMPLICATIONS: The dismissal of 20,000 public servants and leaders across every domain of global health research, policies and programs is absent of any clear plan to sustain life-saving work across these agencies. These ill-informed decisions dismantle the US capacity to advance and regulate science, medicine and health. They risk a resurgence of diseases like HIV and TB, reversing years of scientific advancement and bipartisan federal investment. They also mean the loss of an essential American brain trust in research and development, including the potential of a “chilling effect” in bringing in the next generation of young investigators.

CDC Developments

At the CDC, widespread layoffs have decimated critical divisions, including Reproductive Health, Population Health, and HIV and STD Prevention. Half of the employees at the Division of HIV Prevention received RIF notices. Jonathan Mermin, director of the National Center for HIV, Hepatitis, STD, and Tuberculosis Prevention (NCHSSTP), has been placed on administrative leave, and the Center has been cut, along with the tuberculosis elimination and research branches. The CDC is said to be among the agencies seeing the largest workforce cuts with 2,400 employees to be laid off. 

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FDA Developments

Peter Marks, who led the FDA’s vaccine and biologics center and played a key role in COVID-19 vaccine approvals dubbed “Operation Warp Speed”, stepped down under duress. His resignation letter, which was made public, warned of dire consequences of the US government’s positioning on vaccines and the proliferation of misinformation, evidenced by the growing measles outbreak in Texas. Following his departure, HHS announced plans to cut about 3,500 full-time FDA positions. The agency stated that the layoffs will not impact drug, device, or food reviewers. The FDA has worked in conjunction with the CDC and the USDA to combat bird flu’s rapid spread. 

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NIH Developments

Since Monday, directors of five NIH institutes, including NIAID’s Jeanne Marrazzo, and other senior leaders have received RIF notices, been placed on leave or offered reassignment. As the world’s largest funder of biomedical research, decades of NIH investments have driven the discovery and development of therapies and preventive interventions for HIV, tuberculosis, STIs, viral Hepatitis, other infectious and noncommunicable diseases. NIH-funded research contributed to the development of 354 of 356 drugs (99.4%) approved in the US between 2010 and 2019

The Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions (ATN)—created in 2001—revolutionized research by generating data to develop and deliver life-saving HIV and STI interventions for adolescents, an often-excluded group in research. However, the ATN grant was terminated, undermining decades of investment by NIH and American taxpayers to advance healthcare for adolescents. 

An analysis by amfAR shows the cascading economic harm, which will affect all 50 states. “Each year the NIH awards over 60,000 grants that support over 300,000 researchers at more than 2,500 institutions across the US. For every $1 of NIH funding received, a state generates $2.46 on average in increased economic activity.”            

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Top Researchers Sound Alarm Over Federal Attacks on Science 

Nearly 2,000 top US scientists have signed an open letter condemning the administration’s attacks on science, including funding cuts, censorship, and pressure to alter research. The scientists—all elected members of the National Academies of Sciences (NASEM)—warn that the latest actions threaten both public health and America’s global scientific leadership. They describe a “climate of fear” in research, where scientists self-censor to avoid political backlash. 

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Crisis and Cuts at WHO

At a global Town Hall meeting of World Health Organization (WHO) staff, Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced major cost-cutting measures, including staff reductions starting with senior leadership, and a restructuring based on a “prioritization exercise.” WHO is facing a deepening financial crisis, with a $1.9 billion shortfall in its planned $4.2 billion budget for 2026–2027, and an additional $600 million deficit through 2025. The crisis is largely due to the US withdrawal from WHO, it also includes $130 million of obligations owed from 2024 dues.  

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New Lawsuit Challenges NIH Grant Terminations

Scientists and organizations including the ACLU, Center for Science in the Public Interest, Ibis Reproductive Health and Protect Democracy filed a lawsuit against the US administration arguing that the NIH’s rationale of “not supporting agency priorities” is vague, arbitrary, and illegal under the Administrative Procedure Act and the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause. Many canceled grants involved research on topics politically opposed by the administration, such as transgender health, LGBTQ+ issues, and workforce diversity. The lawsuit contends that the terminations violate congressional mandates, undermine scientific progress, and could ultimately endanger public health.  

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#ICYMI

Read this new piece outlining the promise of next-generation HIV prevention, the challenges posed by the new US administration, and new resources to secure a future for PrEP research, development, and access.

Read More

What We’re Reading

Resources

AVAC Condemns HHS Mass Layoffs

AVAC condemns the US administration’s ongoing reduction in force (RIF) of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which oversees 13 agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In a strategically blind and callous move, the administration has begun to dismiss 20,000 public servants and leaders across every domain of global health research, policies and programs—without any clear plan to sustain life-saving work across these agencies.

Among the thousands of colleagues removed from their positions are two stalwart leaders in HIV, sexually transmitted infections (STI) and sexual and reproductive health: the CDC’s Jonathan Mermin and NIAID’s Jeanne Marrazzo. These two professionals epitomize the best in scientific leadership—unyielding commitment to evidence, rights, community engagement, and to translating science into policy, programs and practice.

“What we’re witnessing is a true ‘brain drain’ at the highest levels of government. Losing Drs. Marrazzo and Mermin is a loss for everyone dedicated to advancing human health in the US and around the world,” said Mitchell Warren, Executive Director at AVAC. “By removing these leaders and defunding the work that has led to breakthroughs in HIV prevention and treatment, this administration is setting the US back decades. These personnel changes aren’t just numbers on an organizational chart, but the removal of dedicated public health leaders who have helped build what so many of us rely on. These illegal actions will make America and the world poorer and sicker.”

As the world’s largest funder of biomedical research, decades of NIH investments have driven the discovery and development of therapies and preventive interventions for HIV, tuberculosis, STIs, viral Hepatitis and other infectious diseases. The Adolescent Trials Network (ATN)—created in 2001—revolutionized research by generating data to develop and deliver life-saving HIV and STI interventions for adolescents, an often-excluded group in research. However, recent cuts have gutted the ATN, undermining decades of investment by NIH and American taxpayers to advance healthcare for adolescents. Just as important, the role of the CDC is absolutely essential, by preventing, detecting and responding to emerging health threats. Together, NIH and CDC drive research, policy and programs that lead to groundbreaking discoveries and safeguard human health. These ill-informed decisions risk not only the economic stability of our scientific workforce but also a resurgence of diseases like HIV and TB, reversing years of scientific advancement.

“The advancements of science have given the world lifesaving options in HIV and many other diseases,” said Stacey Hannah, Director of Research Engagement at AVAC. “The wholesale dismantling of research infrastructure is a reckoning for the field. We cannot—and will not—stand by as science, which has delivered products, programs, and services that combat diseases and empower communities, is systematically dismantled. Once, bipartisan support fueled excellence in public service and research; science has only grown stronger since then, and now we need leadership that matches its promise.” 

“It’s devastating that this is happening now—when in four decades of battling the HIV epidemic we’ve never had the opportunity that we have now with long-acting injectable PrEP to put the world on track to end the AIDS epidemic,” Warren added. “Years of investment, collaboration, and community engagement, with leadership from CDC and NIH, had begun to break down longstanding barriers. Now, this momentum has been abruptly halted. Without urgent, coordinated action, the hard-won gains in HIV prevention will be reversed, leaving communities more vulnerable and deepening inequities.” 

AVAC urges Congress to take action in stopping the wanton destruction and assault on science being waged by the administration. Without federally funded public health research, the US risks losing its place as a global leader in biomedical research and becoming more vulnerable to the next infectious disease threats.

Global Health Watch: USAID Cuts, HHS Overhaul, PEPFAR Uncertainty & South Africa in the Crosshairs

March 28, 2025: Issue 9

This week we’ve seen plans to terminate thousands more USAID awards and completely overhaul the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which oversees the National Institutes of Health, the CDC and the FDA. This comes as US funding for vital scientific research in South Africa faces new threats and the future of PEPFAR remains uncertain, with its reauthorization expiring this week amid shifting priorities and budget cuts.

Termination of USAID Awards

Approximately 86% of global assistance programs (nearly $76 billion) have been or will be terminated by the US administration according to a spreadsheet USAID shared with Congress this week—this includes grants already terminated or earmarked for cancellation. Gavi’s $2.63 billion life-saving vaccine delivery work is among the hardest hit programs. Overall, the government said it will continue only 898 of USAID’s 5,341 awards. This news follows the ruling in AVAC’s lawsuit earlier this month requiring the government to pay USAID partners for foreign aid work completed before February 13. New financial obligations and programs beyond February remain uncertain. 

IMPLICATIONS: Funding for HIV and other health programs are allocated by Congress. The sweeping cuts by the executive branch subverts the will of Congress and as outlined in court challenges, is well beyond its legal authority.  

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Major Overhaul to Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which oversees 13 agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced cuts to 20,000 jobs—reducing its workforce from 82,000 to 62,000—and streamlining 28 divisions into 15 to create a new “Administration for a Healthy America.” This sweeping reorganization, under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. aims to cut $1.8 billion annually.  

Coming out of Thursday’s announcement proposing major cuts and restructuring of HHS, no one at the CDC has received details on what it means for the agency. This comes after last week’s proposed cuts—between $700 million and $1 billion—of the CDC’s Division of HIV Prevention. A new analysis shows the historical importance of funding this Division and includes projections of the impact of cuts on new HIV infections, deaths, and costs.   

IMPLICATIONS: The cuts will hit the NIH, FDA and CDC especially hard. While officials insist “critical services” will remain unaffected, the FDA alone will lose 3,500 employees, raising concerns about the potential impact on food and drug oversight. HHS frames these changes as a necessary “painful period” to tackle issues like rising chronic disease. The CDC is expected to lose 2,400 employees, and NIH will lose 1,200 employees according to the HHS fact sheet.  

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Jay Bhattacharya Confirmed as NIH Director; South Africa’s Research Funding Under Threat

Despite concerns over vaccine skepticism, AIDS denialism and racist views of immunology, Jay Bhattacharya was confirmed as NIH Director. At his confirmation hearing when questioned about the proposed cuts to indirect cost rates at US universities, Bhattacharya defended the policy, saying it would enhance research efficiency while sustaining vital infrastructure. Bhattacharya pledged to focus the NIH on chronic diseases, rebuilding public trust in science through transparency and debate, and undergoing structural changes to support innovative research. On Wednesday, the NIH instructed staff to list all grants and contracts focused on “fighting misinformation or disinformation.” 

NIH grant managers have also been ordered to “hold all [research] awards” for South Africa according to a leaked memo that categorizes South Africa as a “country of concern” alongside China. Programs related to diversity, equity, inclusion, vaccine hesitancy, and climate change will not be prioritized and are being terminated.  

IMPLICATIONS: The entire biomedical research enterprise is under serious threat, with major concerns about infrastructure, scientific agendas, and training of next-generation researchers. In South Africa, it is estimated that the NIH funds as much as 70% of medical research; this potential funding cut could severely undermine critical HIV and TB studies, cripple South Africa’s capacity to conduct vital research, weaken global scientific collaboration, and deepen health inequities.  

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Reauthorizing PEPFAR

This week marked an important turning point for the future of PEPFAR as its reauthorization expired Tuesday, leaving the program in a precarious situation amid shifting political priorities and congressional gridlock. Jirair Ratevosian, former chief of staff for PEPFAR, warns in an opinion editorial that without a long-term legislative framework, PEPFAR partner countries will struggle to assume ownership of their HIV programs and services, and decades of progress could be reversed. He calls for transformative reforms to modernize PEPFAR. 

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PrEP in the Balance: Hopes and Fears in 2025

Read this new piece outlining the promise of next-generation HIV prevention, the challenges posed by the new US administration, and new resources to secure a future for PrEP research, development, and access. And explore this new analysis Impact of PEPFAR Stop Work Orders on PrEP for an in-depth look at what’s at stake for PrEP as an instrumental tool in the effort to reach epidemic control.

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PrEP in the Balance

Hopes and fears in 2025

By Jeanne Baron and Cat Verde-Hashim

In the months leading up to the US funding freeze, the HIV prevention field was slowly gaining momentum—expanding PrEP access, introducing new products like injectable CAB for PrEP (CAB-LA) and the dapivirine vaginal ring (DVR), and strengthening delivery systems to ensure the rollout of injectable LEN for PrEP (LEN) reached those most at risk. This progress has been as a result of years of investment, collaboration, and community engagement. But the freeze has brought this momentum to a halt. Service delivery has been disrupted, community-led programs suspended, and healthcare workers laid off. Stockouts loom, research has been paused, and demand generation efforts have gone silent—just as the sector was beginning to overcome longstanding barriers. Without urgent, coordinated action, the gains made in HIV prevention could be reversed, leaving communities more vulnerable and equity further out of reach.

The global health community ended 2024 with a historic opportunity in sight. With key lessons in hand from the rollout of oral PrEP, it is possible to get rollout right in 2025 with next generation long-acting PrEP and put the world on track to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.

What’s more, ongoing research, presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, showcased the promise of new research and development in HIV prevention and PrEP. PrEPWatch offers a PrEP-specific conference round-up along with this summary article from Spotlight South Africa: A jab that could protect against HIV for a year at a time, and other highlights from major conference.

But as the new US administration took control of the government at the end of January and decimated every aspect of foreign assistance and global health, the impacts could set back the HIV response by decades, allowing the epidemic to resurge. Robust PrEP programs, beefed up to deliver long-acting PrEP, will be essential to delivering injectable Lenacapavir for PrEP and other long-acting PrEP. PEPFAR has been the foundation of PrEP delivery for the world, responsible for 79% of PrEP uptake globally in the last year. That number reached 83% by the end of September of 2024. 84% of surveyed PEPFAR implementers reported disruptions to their programs, many characterized as severe. See our new analysis—Impact of PEPFAR Stop Work Orders on PrEP—for an in-depth look at what’s at stake for PrEP as an instrumental tool in the effort to reach epidemic control.

Also documented by the PEPFAR Impact Tracker, PEPFAR Watch, amfAR, Lancet HIV, GBGMC, and HIV Modelling Consortium, the scale of the devastation is mind-numbing: Criminalized populations such as sex workers, transgender individuals and gay men are finding sites that once provided safe access to treatment and prevention shuttered. And governments fear blacklisting from future US government funding if they support these sites. A new UNAIDS analysis finds “there would be a 400% increase in AIDS deaths, amounting to 6.3 million deaths,” if PEPFAR is not re-authorized (which it was not) and no other resources fill the gap. The HIV Modelling Consortium finds without funding for prevention programmes in Africa, over the next ten years, incidence rates amongst adults could triple and vertical transmission is likely to double. See AVAC’s March PxWire for details.

PEPFAR’s goal had been to initiate 100,000 users across ten African countries on injectable cabotegravir (CAB) by the end of 2025. By the end of October 2024, they had initiated 5,000 users across four countries, but in January 2025, procurement for 2025 was paused. Projects studying CAB and DVR serving over 11,000 participants have been terminated, and other projects were suspended. In Kenya, 17% of total nurses (22,000) and (12,000) ancillary staff have stopped work; in Zambia and Malawi numbers rise to 20% (17,000) and 43% (4,500) of nurses, respectively.

With these threats to PrEP scale-up jeopardizing the HIV response, the ambitious announcement, made in December 2024, by PEPFAR and the Global Fund to reach 2 million people with LEN for PrEP over three years must be supported. Early in March, Global Fund Executive Director Peter Sands told the Bhekisisa Centre for Health Journalismit will fund the rollout of LEN for PrEP with or without PEPFAR.

“We are still maintaining our ambition on lenacapavir for PrEP,” said Sands, “We see lenacapavir as a potential game changer in the fight against HIV as an injectable, long-acting PrEP solution that is pretty well 100% effective. It’s not going to be right for everybody, but we need to find out more from having people use it.”

Now what?

The field must not delay in the face of this destructive and lethal attack on global health and HIV prevention. Instead, the field must adapt to a significantly changed landscape for PEPFAR and beyond. Most countries are seeking alternative funding sources (Global Fund, government financing) and integrating service delivery (comprehensive care clinics and key population services) into public health systems. Those efforts are a start but will take time and will not be enough alone to rebuild the collapsed foundation that PEPFAR provided until January 20, 2025. Ongoing commitments from the Global Fund and Unitaid are essential but will also not be enough. An expanded role for the private sector and other innovations in delivering HIV prevention could be part of the solution. But more is needed. The solutions are out there, it will take courage and vision to work in solidarity to preserve existing programs that offer oral PrEP and expand with long-acting PrEP. The world must re-start and sustain the introduction of CAB for PrEP and the dapivirine vaginal ring (DVR) to make choice a reality. Investments by the Global Fund and Ministries of Health in PrEP must increase.

Peter Sands is pointing the way. The promise of HIV prevention is just as real as it was before the new administration took office. Only now we must find a new path. To stay on track will require trust, innovation, commitment and investment.

Let’s do it.

Launch of Lancet Global Health Series

Shaping the future of clinical trials

As the global research community confronts drastic cuts and extraordinary opposition to its work by the US government, the world cannot lose focus on the critical need for high-quality, impactful clinical research.

This Friday, The World Health Organization (WHO) will host a webinar to launch a series of articles to be published later today in Lancet Global Health, Shaping the Future of Clinical Trials.

Friday, 28 March, 13.00 – 14.30 CET/ 08.00 – 09.30am EDT

This webinar will explore strategies to advance the May 2022 WHO Resolution 75.8, Strengthening clinical trials to provide high-quality evidence on health interventions and to improve research quality and coordination while examining each of the seven articles in the series.

At AVAC, we are especially pleased that one of the seven papers highlights the essential role of community engagement, referencing the Good Participatory Practice (GPP) guidelines, to improve research conduct and outcomes. This paper—Better engagement, better evidence: working in partnership with patients, the public, and communities in clinical trials with involvement and good participatory practice—is co-authored by AVAC’s Stacey Hannah and Jessica Salzwedel and partner, Catherine Slack of the HIV/AIDS Vaccine Ethics Group in South Africa. (For more about GPP, be sure to check out our online GPP Body of Evidence.) 

We hope you will look out for the series of papers later today and join the conversation Friday to learn more about WHO’s call to make engagement central to clinical trials. Together we will discuss systemic gaps, structural inequities, and solutions—including stronger policies, increased funding, better regulatory oversight, and a research culture that integrates GPP as essential to future clinical trials around the world.