And in addition to his work with Iloilo Pride Team, Youth Voices Count and the Global Fund, Justin is a social sciences lecturer at a local college.
“What motivates me is the urgent need to change the status-quo for my community. It inspires me every day to educate, mobilize and advocate to protect the human rights of marginalized people,” he says.
Tackling the Inequalities that Fuel HIV
In countries where the Global Fund invests, AIDS-related deaths have dropped by 65% over the last 20 years. But progress has not been equal, and inequalities fuel the epidemic today.
In every region of the world, gay men and other men who have sex with men are disproportionately impacted by HIV. The risk of a gay man acquiring HIV is 28 times higher compared to other male adults. Across Europe, North America, Latin America and Asia, 40% of all new HIV infections are among gay men.
Even when health services are available, structural factors like stigma, discrimination and violence persist and prevent people, including the LGBTQI+ community in many regions of the world, from having access to HIV prevention – which contributes to higher infection rates.
In response, the Global Fund not only fights HIV by ensuring a wide range of tailored HIV prevention, testing and treatment services are readily available, but also by supporting countries to tackle the human rights barriers that cut people off from health care, including HIV prevention.