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Pepfar funding to fight HIV/AIDS has saved 26 million lives since 2003: how cutting it will hurt AfricaIn January, Pepfar reported to Congress that its own investigators had found that four nurses in Mozambique had used Pepfar funding to perform abortions (which are legal in Mozambique), 21 in all.
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The Christian Post on MSNEvangelical mission doctor says ‘many will die’ if PEPFAR dismantled; Amy Grant, country artists speak outAn Evangelical mission doctor has warned that millions of lives are at stake surrounding the potential dismantling of the U S ...
The cuts the administration has made have alarmed public health advocates. A sudden end to PEPFAR could kill six million ...
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allAfrica.com on MSNUN agency warns of ‘surge’ in AIDS deaths without US fundingAmid continuing uncertainty about the impact of deep US funding cuts to humanitarian work worldwide, the head of the UN ...
THE END OF PEPFAR? America’s most celebrated global health program, credited with saving more than 25 million lives, is on the brink of survival, POLITICO’s Carmen Paun reports. President ...
Even if its authorization is allowed to expire tomorrow, PEPFAR will survive. Instead, the program faces a much bigger problem as a result of cuts to USAID, which administered the majority of ...
Congressional reauthorization for the landmark U.S. HIV/AIDS initiative known as PEPFAR quietly expires today. It’s a blow, but not a mortal one — although the program still faces an ...
In January, Pepfar reported to Congress that its own investigators had found that four nurses in Mozambique had used Pepfar funding to perform abortions (which are legal in Mozambique), 21 in all.
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