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Global Health at Risk: MSF Warns of Consequences of Funding Cuts

On Wednesday, September 17, 2025

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Global efforts to fight three of the world’s most harmful and widespread infectious diseases—AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria—are now under threat due to dramatic cuts in global health financing. 

In January, the United States—previously the largest funder of global health programs—announced a suspension and review of all international aid. Since then, nearly $3 billion of the $6 billion USD it had pledged to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria for 2023 to 2025 remains unfulfilled. 

Within the framework of the International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, held in June, Luxembourg announced a contribution of €13.8 million to the Fund, marking an increase over its initial commitment at the Global Fund’s Seventh Replenishment in 2022. MSF acknowledges the effort, in a context where other major donors have chosen to significantly reduce their cooperation. 

The Global Fund has long played a fundamental role in supporting fragile health systems across Africa, Asia, Latin America and beyond. 

Its grants help purchase medications and diagnostic tests, pay health workers and sustain disease prevention efforts. Without substantial pledges in the coming weeks and months, decades-long progress in reducing illness and death could be reversed. 

Médecins Sans Frontières, which provides medical care to tens of thousands of patients with HIV or TB and more than 3 million people with malaria each year, is deeply concerned about the impact of weakening support for the Global Fund. While MSF’s work is not financed by the Fund, hundreds of community-based health organizations that rely on its support are now scaling back plans amid financial uncertainty and looming cuts. 

The consequences are already visible,” said Antonio Flores, Senior HIV/TB Advisor, MSF. “In Honduras, abrupt cuts by PEPFAR halted HIV prevention and care programs. Patients lost access to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) overnight, and health workers lost their jobs. We’re now seeing patients return with advanced opportunistic infections.” 

The reality of infectious diseases is that when left unchecked, they worsen and spread. Cutting funding undermines years of hard-won progress, while sustaining successful approaches and supporting promising innovations can save lives. 

Despite medical advances, HIV still causes an estimated 1.3 million new infections and more than 600,000 deaths annually. Community-based organizations supported by the Global Fund have proven highly effective in improving prevention and treatment outcomes. Their progress must not be reversed. 

New injectable PrEP offers promising protection for people at high risk of HIV, yet national scale-up efforts in Malawi have stalled due to reduced US funding. Sex workers in the country face HIV prevalence rates nearing 60 percent. 

Tuberculosis causes an estimated 1.5 million deaths per year. Thanks to efforts by the Global Fund and the UN High-Level Meeting on TB, fewer cases go undetected. But in Sudan, MSF has witnessed TB testing equipment sitting unused due to lack of trained staff. In Belarus, research on drug-resistant TB supported by MSF and the Global Fund was recently halted due to unfulfilled funding. 

Malaria remains the leading cause of death among children under five in endemic countries. MSF teams in the Central African Republic, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo report frequent shortages of diagnostic tests and medications, and understaffed facilities with deadly consequences for young patients.  

Imagine hearing your unique child’s voice for the last time because of a preventable disease. If the 8th replenishment does not go ahead, it would jeopardize decades of progress, leading to a resurgence of malaria cases and unnecessary loss of lives.” commented Joseph Wato, President COFIS-CSU Cameroon (CSOs Coalition for Health Financing and Universal Health Coverage in Cameroon.  

The notion that domestic resource mobilization can replace global health funding is not viable in many of the places MSF works.

 As highlighted in MSF’s recent report, Deadly Gaps, the cost burden increasingly falls on patients who cannot afford care. 

Entire programs have shut down: As a result, patients are being lost to follow-up, treatment adherence is weakening, and anecdotal evidence points to rising unexplained deaths, possibly linked to psychosocial breakdown, relapse, or food insecurity.” added the Country Director of Youth Alive Liberia, reinforcing the urgent need for sustained international support. 

MSF urges Luxembourg to maintain its critical support to the Global Fund on behalf of heavily affected communities worldwide. 

The fight against HIV, tuberculosis and malaria is a global, generational challenge—and it is far from over.