ABSTRACT
This paper examines the decline of the AIDS Programme in Brazil, the Latin American country most affected by the epidemic, with emphasis in the second decade of the twenty-first century. For many years, Brazil served as a model in Global Health due to a comprehensive preventive policy, a partnership between the government and health activists and the support of life-saving drugs as public goods rather than commodities. The regression of AIDS policies in Brazil interacted with developments in the United States as well as with multilateral agencies like UNAIDS that emphasised biomedicalisation in the response to the disease where broad human-rights programmes and alliance with activists were not priorities. International programmes like the ‘Ending AIDS’ campaign indirectly undermined the exceptional status AIDS enjoyed since the late 1980s. The backlash in Brazilian policies to fight AIDS was a result of the fragmentation of the left and the empowerment of radical conservative authoritarian and religious forces. The result was the breakdown of the long-held belief that successful anti-AIDS disease programmes could simultaneously help control the disease and build better healthcare systems and ultimately prompted the end of the special place AIDS’ policy had in Brazil.
Acknowledgements
Marcos Cueto thanks the support of the Bogliasco Foundation in Italy and the Bolsa de Produtividade em Pesquisa of the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico (CNPq) in Brazil. Gabriel Lopes is grateful to the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES), Finance Code 001, in Brazil. Both authors would wish to acknowledge the help of Elizabeth O'Brien, Patricia Clavin, Jakob Vogel, Nancy Nkoudou, Naomi Sutcliffe de Moraes, the anonymous reviewers and Richard Parker.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).