Title 22 › Chapter 83— UNITED STATES LEADERSHIP AGAINST HIV/AIDS, TUBERCULOSIS, AND MALARIA › Subchapter III— BILATERAL EFFORTS › Part B— Assistance for Women, Children, and Families › § 7652
Requires the U.S. government to make preventing mother-to-child HIV transmission a top priority. It also must focus on treating and caring for family members and caregivers, and helping children left orphaned by AIDS. The government should try to match its spending with money from businesses, other countries, and international groups. A required 5-year plan must set clear goals: by 2013 reach at least 80 percent of pregnant women in the countries hardest hit by HIV where the U.S. works; make sure children get care in proportion to their share of infections; combine treatment and prevention programs for mothers and babies; grow programs for orphans and vulnerable children; make sure women in prevention programs get or are referred to maternal and child health services; and make a timeline to expand use of more effective prevention treatments in line with each country’s policies, with the aim of universal use as soon as possible. The Global AIDS Coordinator must create a Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Panel to review efforts and recommend how to reach the 80 percent goal. The Coordinator will lead the Panel but not vote. The Panel, appointed within one year after July 30, 2008, can have up to 15 members from health agencies, U.S. and foreign officials, program implementers, researchers, advocates, clinicians, people living with HIV, and NGOs. The Panel must check progress, review science and program data, look at international cooperation, find barriers including stigma, suggest better links between prevention and treatment, and recommend actions. It must send a public report to Congress within one year of starting. The Coordinator must consider the report and describe responses in the annual report required under law. The Panel may get whatever funds are needed for fiscal years 2009–2011 and ends 60 days after filing 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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60