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UNAIDS update: Impact of the pause of U.S. foreign assistance in Ethiopia

05 February 2025

The pause of U.S. foreign assistance on Ethiopia will affect many areas of development, however its impact on Ethiopia’s national HIV response is particularly severe.

Ethiopia is on track to reach the global 95-95-95 targets: with 90% of people in Ethiopia living with HIV being aware of their HIV status; 94% of those diagnosed with HIV receiving antiretroviral (ARV) therapy; and 96% of people on ARV therapy achieving viral suppression.  ARV treatment is currently provided to 503,000 people via 1,400 health facilities across the country.   However, with ongoing challenges to the country health system and socio-economic development, Ethiopia remains reliant on external donors for its HIV response. 

SERVICE DISRUPTION: Pause of U.S. assistance to community programs and drop in centres serving women, young girls and priority populations at higher risk of HIV infection means tens of thousands of individuals will no longer be able to access critical services such as HIV testing, antiretroviral treatment, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention, and screenings for tuberculosis, sexually transmitted infections and support to address gender-based violence.  The closure of many drop-in centres and the termination of outreach workers’ and peer educators’ contracts will effectively shut off support to vulnerable groups.

Table: Breakdown of Service Disruption in three regions in Ethiopia: Addis Ababa; Oromia and Gambella

Number of people Type of service
2,385 People will not be able to continue to access ARV treatment; TB treatment; STI treatment  
18,075 People will no longer receive support for health and care services (differentiated service that facilitates easier access to health care providers)
14,811 People will not be encouraged and supported to access HIV testing (key to the success of HIV programmes is people knowing their status and starting treatment early)
879 People will stop accessing pre-exposure prophylaxis to prevention new HIV infections (PrEP)
100 People will stop the pilot programme for the new simplified, twice annual injectable PrEP
235,560 People will no longer receive condoms to prevent new HIV infections and sexually transmitted infections. 

SUPPLY CHAIN DISRUPTIONS: The funding freeze has caused critical delays in the supply of essential HIV services, including testing kits and other resources. Notably, PEPFAR is responsible for 100% of the procurement of viral load and Early Infant Diagnosis (EID) reagents. The interruption in funding is limiting the availability of these crucial supplies, undermining the program’s ability to conduct timely viral load and EID testing, which are essential for effective patient monitoring and treatment.

REDUCED CAPACITY FOR HEALTHCARE SUPPORT: The pause threatens to stall efforts to build local healthcare capacity. It impacts the training and support of health workers, slowing progress in Ethiopia’s fight against HIV. This reduction in capacity limits the ability of healthcare professionals to respond effectively to the growing HIV epidemic. The disruption of ICAP’s capacity building, M&E, and clinical mentoring threatens care for advanced HIV patients, putting Ethiopia’s progress at risk. The freeze is also likely to scale back key prevention programs, including outreach, education, and services for key populations, worsening the epidemic

HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEM DISRUPTION: Ethiopia's Health Information System is severely affected by the stop work order. The termination of 10,000 data clerks, who are essential for entering ART data into the health information management system, is compromising data management, particularly in tracking lost-to-follow-up cases. This disrupts key national activities, such as HIV estimations and studies of key populations. Furthermore, the cessation of the HIV surveys and surveillances, and HIV Estimation Technical Working Group (TWG) which includes CDC, USAID, and PEPFAR undermines the accuracy of HIV data and threatens the continuity of critical HIV data management systems.

HUMAN RESOURCES IMPACT:  Ministry of Health shared that 5,000 public health workers’ contracts funded by U.S. assistance from all regions in Ethiopia have been terminated.  These health workers are supporting Ethiopia’s HIV response – improving regional capacity to accelerate progress towards Ending AIDS.   While the government of Ethiopia will take over the gap, the sudden loss of programmatic experience and the transition period will be rough.

ACTIONS TO ADDRESS THE SITUATION: On 4 February 2025, The Ministry of Health of Ethiopia issued a circular to all regional health bureau to assure regional health offices that the government will step in to manage the work that was performed by the US-funded personnel in order to ensure programme continuity. 

UNAIDS Ethiopia together with WHO will be convening a situation assessment briefing on 11 February 2025 with government, civil society organizations and development partners to identify solutions to address gaps in the HIV, TB, Malaria and health and community systems responses in Ethiopia.