AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition Receives $14 Million Grant from Gates Foundation to Develop International HIV Prevention Research Advocacy Network
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
New AVAC Report on the State of the
AIDS Vaccine Field Calls for Accelerated Action
in AIDS Vaccine and HIV Prevention
Research
Seattle -- The AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC) announced today at the AIDS Vaccine 2007 Conference that it has received a five-year, $14 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to create a new international HIV Prevention Research Advocacy Network. The Advocacy Network will work with civil society, policymakers, and research partners around the world to advance ethical research and development of new HIV prevention interventions, ensure that communities are informed about and involved in prevention research, and ensure that the benefits of research are shared globally.
The new grant broadens AVAC's advocacy
focus beyond AIDS vaccines, to include other
new HIV prevention interventions such as
microbicides and oral prevention drugs.
"We are entering a new era in HIV prevention research, with more products being tested in efficacy trials than ever before," said Mitchell Warren, Executive Director of AVAC. "A coordinated global effort is urgently needed to support the wide range of prevention research, to ensure that the voices of civil society and communities are heard, and to prepare for results from these trials."
"It is essential to build support for and understanding of how new HIV prevention tools will help accelerate efforts to slow this epidemic," said Joe Cerrell, Director of Global Health Advocacy for the Gates Foundation. "AVAC has been an important voice in AIDS vaccine advocacy for the last decade, and we are extremely pleased to support this broadening of its work."
"This generous grant from the Gates Foundation will allow AVAC to expand our advocacy efforts and build a global network of advocates who will work to promote HIV prevention research and help communities prepare for the use of new HIV prevention options," said Mike Powell, President of the AVAC Board of Directors.
AVAC remains committed to advocacy for
effective AIDS vaccines, and will now be able
to expand its work. The new international
HIV Prevention Research Advocacy Network
will:
Develop international advocacy
partnerships that support both the needs of
communities involved in research and a global
advocacy movement for HIV prevention
research.
Translate complex
scientific ideas to communities AND translate
community needs and perceptions to the
scientific community.
Work to hold
both research agencies and advocates
accountable for accelerating ethical prevention
research and development.
Help ensure
that communities, policymakers, and civil
society have realistic expectations about HIV
prevention research and specific clinical
trials.
Work closely with other
groups conducting HIV prevention research
advocacy, including microbicide advocacy
groups.
"With so many clinical trials of HIV prevention interventions underway or planned in the next few years, there is an urgent need for a global advocacy network that will expand and support partnerships among the different groups working in the field," said Lori Heise, Director of the Global Campaign for Microbicides.
Developing and maintaining strong support
for clinical research of new HIV prevention
interventions can be difficult in many
communities and countries, but is necessary if
ethical research is to take place in these
communities. The Advocacy Network will
link advocates, researchers, and policymakers
from around the world and will share
information and identify and promote "good
practices" for advocacy and clinical
research.
"This network will provide an important
knowledge base for those of us working on and
supporting clinical trials in our communities,"
said Manju Chatani, coordinator of the African
Microbicides Advocacy Group. "We look forward
to working with AVAC and other partners to
strengthen HIV prevention research advocacy
here in Africa and in communities around the
world."
Resetting the Clock -- New AVAC
Report Examines State of the AIDS Vaccine Field
and Calls for New, Ambitious Deadlines for
Vaccine Development
AVAC also released its annual report examining the state of the AIDS vaccine field today at the AIDS Vaccine 2007 Conference. The new report, entitled Resetting the Clock, outlines the specific deadlines and challenges facing the field in the arenas of AIDS vaccine scientific strategy, clinical trials, and the broader prevention field and provides recommendations for action by researchers, policymakers, industry, funders, civil society, and advocates, including AVAC.
The report also discusses progress and challenges of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise, an alliance of independent partners committed to accelerating the development of an AIDS vaccine. AVAC is one of the founding stakeholders of the Enterprise.
"We will soon have data from the test-of-concept studies of novel AIDS vaccine candidates," said Warren. "It is time to reset the clock to launch a countdown for meeting new, ambitious deadlines for developing new vaccine concepts and candidates that will be needed whether or not there is evidence of benefit from these first test-of-concept trials."
Key features of Resetting the Clock
include:
New Countdowns looks at
progress and barriers in funding and
strategy-setting for the vaccine field,
addresses key questions about what needs to be
done as we wait for the results from current
trials, and looks at the responsibilities of
key institutions. It also includes an
updated industry survey.
Racing
Against Time examines clinical trials issues
and finds that the field is already in danger
of slipping behind on several fronts, including
clinical trials capacity, consensus on
standards of prevention and levels of care, and
new funding structures for US prevention
research networks.
Wake Up Call
explores the critical lessons to be learned
from responses to male circumcision and HPV
vaccine introduction. It also includes a
survey of advocates from other areas of the
AIDS response about prevention
research.
"This report shows that the
current state of HIV prevention research is
troubling and challenging. It is time for
all AIDS advocates to re-exam¬ine their
messages, their missions, and their goals for
the next five to ten years," said Warren.
"We at AVAC remain committed to our advocacy
for an effective AIDS vaccine and are excited
about expanding the scope of our work to
include the broader field of HIV prevention
research and working with new partners around
the globe to ensure that the world finds a way
to defeat HIV/AIDS."
Resetting the Clock is available online at
http://www.avac.org/reports.htm.
# #
About AVAC
Founded in 1995, the AIDS
Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC) is a
non-profit, community- and consumer-based
organization that uses public education, policy
analysis, advocacy and community mobilization
to accelerate the ethical development and
global delivery of AIDS vaccines and other HIV
prevention options. For more information, visit
http://www.avac.org.




