Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 83— - UNITED STATES LEADERSHIP AGAINST HIV/AIDS, TUBERCULOSIS, AND MALARIA › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - BILATERAL EFFORTS › Part Part B— - Assistance for Women, Children, and Families › § 7652
The United States must make stopping HIV from being passed from pregnant women to their babies a top priority in its global HIV/AIDS work. It must also focus on treating family members and caregivers and helping children left orphaned by AIDS. The government should try to stretch its dollars by getting matching money from private groups, other countries, and international organizations. A required five-year plan under section 7611 must set specific goals. By 2013, the plan must reach at least 80 percent of pregnant women in the most affected countries where the United States runs HIV programs. By 2013, the share of children getting care must match their share of infected people. The plan must link treatment with programs to stop mother-to-child spread, expand care for children affected or orphaned by HIV, make sure women in prevention programs get or are referred to maternal and child health services, and create a timeline to expand access to more effective prevention treatments consistent with each country’s policies and aiming for universal use as soon as possible. The Global AIDS Coordinator must create a Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Panel (chaired by the Coordinator as a nonvoting chair) with up to 15 members appointed not later than 1 year after July 30, 2008. The panel’s membership must include specific representatives from HHS, USAID, foreign health ministers, implementers, researchers, and patient advocates or NGOs (with priority to people in countries where programs operate). The panel must review program results and science, identify barriers including stigma, suggest ways to link prevention and treatment, and recommend actions to reach the 80 percent goal. It must publish a report within 1 year after first meeting; the report will be public, the Coordinator must consider its recommendations and report back in the annual report under section 2151b–2(f). Funds are authorized as needed for fiscal years 2009 through 2011. The panel ends 60 days after it files its report.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 7652
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73