Mapping Pathways is a multi-national project to develop and nurture a research-driven, community-led global understanding of the emerging evidence base around the adoption of antiretroviral-based prevention strategies to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The evidence base is more than results from clinical trials - it must include stakeholder and community perspectives as well.

19 April 2012

A More Broad Integrative HIV Prevention Conference Is Planned for the Future

via AIDSmap.com, by Gus Cairns

ASHM Australasian HIV/AIDS Conference 2011The International Microbicides Conference held in Sydney this week will be the last of its kind, delegates were told in a closing plenary today.

From 2014 onwards, it is planned, a single biennial conference on all aspects of HIV prevention will be held.

Globally, the two largest funders of HIV prevention research are the US National Institutes of Health's Office of AIDS Research and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Gina Brown of the Office of AIDS Research and Stephen Becker of the Gates Foundation shared the podium to make a joint speech outlining the reasons for no longer funding separate conferences, and instead convening a programme committee to plan a biennial global HIV prevention conference.

They said they were proposing an "integrative prevention meeting" in recognition of the fact that no one HIV prevention method is likely to end the epidemic and that different methods can be synergistic. Stephen Becker said that the demand for a more integrated approach to HIV prevention “was being voiced from the ground up", by community advocates and NGOs, as well as by donors who wished to see more efficiency and less duplication of effort within the field.

Cross-cutting dialogue between specialists pursuing different areas is more likely to generate combinations of prevention approaches than individual approaches being pursued in neighbouring research 'silos', Becker added.

There was duplication of effort in some areas. Much of the animal-model and mucosal-immunity work being done in the HIV prevention technologies underlay HIV vaccine development as much as it did microbicide development. he said. And, he added, the social and behavioural research that underpinned prevention technology research by helping to understand which populations need what HIV prevention methods formed the same backdrop, whether what was being developed was a vaccine, a microbicide or the roll-out of a circumcision programme.

Gina Brown said that a world HIV prevention conference planning committee would be convened immediately, comprising experts from all fields including social sciences and community advocacy. In common with the international microbicides conferences, which have been held biennially since 2002, the last of the the annual AIDS Vaccine conferences, which started in 2000, will be held in 2013 in Barcelona. Other prevention conferences, such as next week's second international Treatment as Prevention Workshop in Vancouver, will also no longer receive funding as separate events.

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[Content that is linked from other sources is for informational purposes and should not construe a Mapping Pathways position.]

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