New PEPFAR data prompts conflicting assessments of the U.S. HIV program after foreign-aid disruptions
The Facts
- PEPFAR is the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, a U.S. HIV/AIDS program launched in 2003 under President George W. Bush.
- PEPFAR is widely credited with saving 26 million lives.
- The United States spends about $5 billion a year on PEPFAR's work.
- The Trump administration froze foreign aid in 2025, and reporting says the move interrupted some PEPFAR-supported operations before waivers were issued for lifesaving programs.
- PEPFAR supports HIV diagnosis, treatment, outreach and support programs.
- In past years, PEPFAR data was released four times a year to help experts track whether the program was meeting its targets.
Context
What is PEPFAR?
PEPFAR is the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, a U.S. program launched in 2003 under President George W. Bush to fund HIV diagnosis, treatment, outreach and support programs worldwide NPR,Public Radio Tulsa.
Why are the new data getting so much attention?
The data are being closely watched because PEPFAR is a major U.S.-funded global HIV program, and experts had been waiting months for an update after the Trump administration's foreign-aid freeze raised questions about whether the program had been significantly disrupted or had recovered under later waivers NPR,Public Radio Tulsa.
Why does the timing of the release matter?
In prior years, PEPFAR data was released four times annually, so the delayed release left global health specialists without the usual regular picture of how the program was performing and whether it was hitting its targets NPR,Public Radio Tulsa.
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