The need for HIV vaccine awareness among Nigerians

By William Rashidi, 2018 AVAC Fellow

Within the last decade, persons living with HIV have witnessed improved drug regimen compared to the past when these persons take a cocktail of drugs to help the immune system respond to the virus. The continued advances in treatment are delightful and hold optimism, even as scientists double efforts to find a vaccine or cure.

But then some questions need to be asked; what is the level of awareness of persons living with HIV to the current efforts of finding either a preventive or a therapeutic vaccine? How informed is the Nigerian populace on HIV vaccine and preventive research? What is the Nigerian government investment in research for treatment and vaccine?

The need to be aware of current efforts in HIV vaccine and to direct our advocacy efforts towards ensuring sustainable funding for research to develop a safe and effective vaccine, is because we know a HIV vaccine will contribute to the control of the epidemic in the short run, and can lead to the eradication of HIV infection in the long run.

Nigeria has the second largest burden of HIV.  Its poor HIV management makes the leading source of new HIV infection in the world. Prevention of mother to child coverage is only at 31%. Nigeria needs to take up leadership and contribute significantly to HIV and AIDS research, including HIV vaccine research and development.

Nigeria can fund capacity development programs for its local researchers. It can also initiate and fund collaborative HIV vaccine research efforts with leading institutions around the world in ways that ensures Nigeria’s peculiarities are addressed in the global HIV vaccine research enterprise.

At this remarkable time in the history of HIV prevention science, we need to sustain our current efforts at developing a HIV vaccine. We need to support all promising interventions and move them to scale. We need to prepare regulatory pathways to ensure fast tracked access once developed.

We can and will keep hope alive, conquer our fear of HIV, eradicate stigma, remove structural barriers and inform ourselves of the giant efforts of researchers and scientist working towards a world that is free of HIV.