News

During a mid-June event at Otter Creek Church, musicians and activists praised PEPFAR for saving millions of lives and urged ...
George W. Bush’s program to fight HIV and AIDS in Africa has been credited with saving millions of lives. The Trump ...
As USAID offices officially close on Tuesday, Dr. Brooke Nichols's research is not alone. An international, 15-member ...
In its latest budget request, the administration aims to slash 38 percent, or $2.9 billion, from the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, (or PEPFAR), a move that would also dismantle the ...
Amy Grant meeting Bono at Charlie Peacock's house in 2002 to discuss the HIV/AIDS crisis. The queen of Christian pop is ...
Mike Benz and Cenk Uygur debate the question of abolishing foreign aid on a livestream Saturday hosted by ZeroHedge. Benz ...
The US foreign aid agency formally closed down Tuesday, with President Donald Trump's administration trumpeting the end of ...
Pepfar is currently funded at US$7.5 billion annually. It accounts for over 10% of all US foreign assistance and over half of US global health assistance.
Dr. Mark Dybul was an architect of PEPFAR, a program credited with saving 26 million lives. Now its future could be in jeopardy as Congress reviews the Trump administration's funding rescission memo.
PEPFAR’s current short-term authorization will expire March 25. The foreign aid review is expected by be completed April 19. advertisement. We hope the review will take our research into account.
Millions rely on PEPFAR for lifesaving HIV treatment, but US funding freezes have left clinics shuttered. Here’s what’s happening — and why it matters.