Just as individuals are aging with HIV, so too are entire societies. HIV treatment has reversed drops in life expectancy in many countries where PEPFAR and other global HIV/AIDS programs have worked. With this astonishing public health success comes a generational question: Will these added years of life translate to added years of health and well-being? Or will they bring chronic physical and mental conditions, with the greatest burden falling on socially excluded groups and those lacking access to integrated and person-centered health care? 

 

As countries move toward their goal of ending AIDS and as the US Congress debates the reauthorization of PEPFAR, this panel will explore how global HIV/AIDS programs can support health systems in AIDS-affected countries to adapt to the needs of aging populations. We will also examine how to further the global health equity agenda by overcoming legal and structural barriers to the integration of health and social care for diverse aging populations.

 

The dialogue will be moderated by Jonathan Cohen, Director of Policy Engagement at the USC Institute on Inequalities in Global Health with opening remarks by Sofia Gruskin, Director of the USC Institute on Inequalities in Global Health.

 

The webinar is hosted by the USC Institute on Inequalities in Global Health

 

Please join us on Thursday, September 28th at 9:00 am PT. 

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