This week, the global health world lost a true leader, Stephen Lewis, whose life was defined by an unwavering commitment to creating a better, more just world. Lewis’ unwavering passion and fearless advocacy continue to set the standard, reminding us that global health demands urgency, equity and accountability. This week’s issue follows that charge. It covers growing calls for transparency: from Zambia’s bilateral MoU, to the anticipated proposal to cut 20% cut from the US National Institute of Health’s 2027 budget, and the pricing and access negotiations around lenacapavir, as well as the Global HIV Prevention Coalition’s new Prevention Access Framework.
Advocates Challenge US Plan to Tie HIV Funding to Zambia Minerals Negotiations
In response to a leaked draft memo, more than 100 civil society organizations sent a letter to the US Secretary of State urging him to reject reports that the US may withhold Zambia’s HIV and health funding if the country does not agree to a critical minerals deal as part of the America First Global Health Strategy. Advocates warned that “threatening these programs — and the lives of those reliant on them — to gain leverage in trade negotiations is ethically indefensible…[withholding] these vital medicines would only deepen poverty and suffering in Zambia and the surrounding region, creating a ripple effect of instability that could have unforeseen impacts on US interests over the short, medium and long term.” The State Department dismissed the letter, characterizing the signatories as partisan advocacy groups and questioning their credibility rather than addressing the substance of their concerns.
IMPLICATIONS: Angola became the 27th country overall and 22nd in Africa to sign an agreement this week. Linking HIV and public health funding to broader economic negotiations is a coercive model of global health security and diplomacy. It undermines trust, country ownership and the stability of programs. As more countries sign-on to these agreements, the precedent being set raises urgent questions about equity, sovereignty and the long-term sustainability of the HIV and larger global health response.
READ:
- Secretary of State Rubio Urged to Reject Threatening HIV Assistance to Zambia in Critical Minerals Negotiations—Trade Justice Education Fund
- Save HIV Funding Responds to State Department Comments Amid Zambia Health Funding Controversy—Save HIV Funding
- Zambian CSOs demand transparency over US- Zambia health deal—Sound of Africa
- CSOs reiterate concerns over proposed $1 billion US health aid, say deal could undermine Zambia—Zambia Monitor
- Lesotho organisations push back against US health deal—Ground Up
A Proposed 20% Cut to US NIH 2027 Budget
The US Administration is expected to propose a 20% cut to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the President’s fiscal year 2027 (FY27) budget request, which is a significant reduction from the agency’s current $47.2 billion budget. Congress already rejected deep cuts to the FY26 NIH budget and instead increased funding to the agency. The new proposal revives earlier efforts to scale back investment in biomedical research and may include restructuring elements – and highlights the concern that the Administration will make budget decisions, irrespective of Congress’s constitutional power of the purse. This all comes amid the instability of the US health and research infrastructure with delays in grant disbursement, cancellations and ongoing funding uncertainty.
IMPLICATIONS: Even before any formal cuts are enacted, the combination of proposed reductions, funding delays and policy shifts is already slowing research and destabilizing what is left. Researchers warn that prolonged uncertainty risks stalled studies, layoffs and a growing “brain drain,” threatening the US’s long-standing leadership in biomedical innovation and global health. Multi-year cuts of this scale could also have cascading economic and public health consequences, weakening the pipeline of discoveries that drive prevention, treatment and global health security.
- White House to propose 20 percent cut to NIH funding—Roll Call
- Research advocates prepare for next NIH budget fight—Axios
Lenacapavir Access Dispute: Where is the Transparency?
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) issued an open letter to Gilead Sciences, criticizing its refusal to sell lenacapavir for HIV PrEP (LEN) directly for use in MSF’s programs. The issue comes amid limited public information on pricing, volumes and supply timelines. Gilead has been channeling all LEN supply through the Global Fund’s procurement mechanism, with PEPFAR also procuring via this route. Gilead’s current production of LEN for LMICs is based on orders from Global Fund for approximately 600,000–700,000 person-years for 2026. While Gilead earlier said they could manufacture larger volumes, they have a 6-9 month manufacturing lead time, meaning that it is hard to secure additional product this year. MSF, which is already accessing limited supply of LEN through the Global Fund, is seeking additional doses to reach populations beyond the early adopter countries. Gilead told MSF that increased LEN supply would not be available until 2027 and only through existing procurement channels.
Meanwhile, new modeling research suggests that the investigational MK-8527 once-monthly oral PrEP pill “could be manufactured at extremely low cost, suggesting that intellectual property and licensing arrangements, rather than production feasibility, will determine equitable access in LMICs.”
IMPLICATIONS: These issues hit on the main challenge: closing the gap between scientific breakthroughs and the systems needed to deliver them with speed, scale and equity to deliver public health impact. Constraining LEN access to limited procurement channels and timelines risks slowing its uptake and excluding populations outside of government-led programs. At the same time, as advocates have been saying for decades, we need to plan for accelerated, equitable access from the start. Products can be produced at large scale and low prices, if policy choices like pricing, licensing, volumes forecasting, market shaping and transparency are prioritized.
- ‘No more than a drop in the ocean’: this drug could end new HIV infections in Eswatini – why isn’t there enough?—The Guardian
- The estimated cost of MK-8527 produced at scale for once-monthly oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in low- and middle-income countries—PLOS Medicine
- Gilead Refuses to sell Doctors without Borders HIV Drug—Public Citizen
- Doctors Without Borders calls Gilead ‘unconscionable’ for refusing to sell HIV prevention drug to the organization—STAT
- Open letter to Gilead: Prevention should not be a privilege—Medecins Sans Frontiers
HIV Prevention 2030 Global Access Framework
The Global HIV Prevention Coalition shared a new Access Framework outlining how, by 2030, countries can ensure that 90% of people in need of HIV prevention services have access and that 90% of people living with HIV are virally suppressed. This, in combination, would lead to a 90% reduction in new HIV infections globally.
What We’re Reading
- Is Trump killing the heralded US effort to help the world battle HIV?—Science
- The 45-year fight against HIV is one of humanity’s greatest victories. It’s also in danger—Vox
- HHS Officials’ Year in Purgatory Is Ending—The Atlantic
- NIH director’s invocation of Vannevar Bush’s legacy to promote Trump science policies sparks pushback—STAT
- With US aid slashed, Nigerian HIV volunteers went door‑to‑door to keep patients alive—Reuters
- Faster, bigger, riskier: The new era of US foreign aid—Devex
- Global health: the long road from saviorism to justice—PLOS Global Public Health
- Diplomacy is not peripheral to public health—it is now public health gets done—PLOS Global Public Health
- African bid to lead United Nations roils region—Devex
- The Global North is increasingly unsafe for global health meetings—The Lancet
- The Horrors That Could Lie Ahead if Vaccines Vanish—ProPublica
- Special edition: Moving mother and child health ‘into the fast lane’—Devex
- Advancing ethical biomedical HIV prevention research for pregnant and lactating people—AIDS
- IAVI announces the onset of first-in-human Phase 1 clinical trial of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to prevent HIV transmission—IAVI
- Sustaining Tuberculosis Innovations to Counter Foreign Aid Cuts—Think Global Health
- Senegal president signs tough new anti-LGBT law doubling jail terms—BBC
- Health orgs warn of ‘dangerous’ supply shortages amid Mideast crisis—Devex






