Health

Trump’s Foreign Aid Retreat Guts Funding for HIV Treatments

A member of the medical team takes a client's blood pressure during an HIV clinic day in Kampala, Uganda on Feb. 17.

Photographer: Hajarah Nalwadda/Getty Images

Lucy Wambui first suspected she was HIV-positive in 2000, when her baby fell ill and died. At the time, treatment for the virus was too costly for many families in the Kenyan town where she lives, 120 miles from Nairobi.

“People used to sell their land to buy medicines,” she recalled. It wasn’t until 2011 that she began antiviral therapy, thanks to free drugs available through the US-funded President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or Pepfar.