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While HIV prevention has made tremendous strides with voluntary medical male circumcision and pre-exposure prophylaxis, there are still millions of people at risk of infection who cannot use either of these interventions. Condoms remain one of the cheapest and most effective tools for preventing HIV, yet UNAIDS data shows major gaps in condom availability across the world.

These gaps arise partly from a shift in priorities: as the demand for HIV treatment has grown, donor appetite for large, highly-subsidized condom social marketing programs has diminished. Yet smart, effective condom programming doesn’t have to be expensive or fully subsidized. This moderated, solution-focused discussion will shift the focus from large-scale, donor-funded condom social marketing programs to more targeted approaches. We’ll look at emerging models of sustainable condom markets across the developing world and ways these models can be replicated. We’ll examine how growing economies, new technologies and greater insi

08:00
Welcome
08:10
Welcome and scene setting
Lilianne Ploumen, Labour Party, Netherlands
08:20
Why Condoms Still and Will Matter
Bidia Deperthes, UNFPA, United States
08:40
Our Current Approach is Failing
Henk Van Renterghem, UNAIDS, Switzerland
Slides
09:00
New Models for Funding Condom Programming
Chastain Mann, Mann Global Health, United States
09:20
National Governments Can Open a New Chapter
09:20
National Governments Can Open a New Chapter
Bernard S. Haufiku, Ministry of Health, Namibia
Slides
09:30
Response from Youth and Civil Society
Daniel Nagel, Youth Against AIDS, Germany
Daughtie Ogutu, African Sex Workers Alliance (ASWA), Kenya
09:40
Q&A Moderated by Co- Chairs
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