The Ministry of Health will expand community-based HIV testing and increase access to self-testing next year as it pushes to strengthen retention in care and roll out a national anti-stigma campaign.
Officials say targeted interventions for vulnerable groups and greater psychosocial support for people living with HIV will form part of the 2026 plan, alongside deeper collaboration with civil society groups.
Today’s World AIDS Day observance comes under the global theme, “Overcoming Disruption Transforming the AIDS Response.” The Ministry says the aim is to maintain momentum and close remaining gaps in prevention, treatment and discrimination.
Most people living with HIV are already on antiretroviral therapy (ART), with the majority achieving viral suppression. Treatment remains free at clinics across the country, and the Medical Research Foundation TT continues to support most people accessing ART.
Officials say early diagnosis and prevention remain critical. Over the past year, the Ministry introduced home-based HIV self-testing and formed the Linkage to Care Team, which connects people to treatment and support through Peer Navigators, Social Workers and counselling services. Outreach programmes have intensified in communities, schools and workplaces, and the programme to eliminate mother-to-child transmission continues.
However, health officials acknowledge stigma remains one of the biggest barriers to access. Reports of workplace discrimination persist, and the Ministry has widened public education efforts as part of its response.
Marking World AIDS Day 2025, the Ministry repeated its appeal for citizens, institutions and community leaders to help build a system where “everyone can access care with dignity and respect,” as it pursues the long-stated goal of ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.
