From AVAC <[email protected]>
Subject STIWatch Sept. Newsletter: World Congress Insights, Impact of Defunding Research, New WHO STI Guidelines and What’s Needed Most
Date September 23, 2025 4:59 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed] An initiative of ([link removed])
September 23, 2025


** STI World Congress Insights, Impact of Defunding Research, New WHO STI Guidelines and What’s Needed Most
------------------------------------------------------------

The STI field is grappling with the effects of recent US government funding and policy shifts that have disrupted STI research, surveillance, and prevention programs worldwide. Yet, alongside these challenging developments, innovation and advocacy continue to progress. This update from STIWatch features insights from July’s STI & HIV 2025 World Congress ([link removed]) in Montreal, powerful perspectives from African advocacy partners on what’s needed most, and new developments including World Health Organization (WHO) guidance on STIs and review on policy implementation. ([link removed])
The Real-World Impact of Defunding STI Research

[link removed]

The US Administration's funding cuts and policy shifts are reshaping the global public health landscape in profound ways. While many of these changes have drawn significant media attention, the impact on STI research and prevention has remained largely overlooked, even though the consequences are dire. Massive cuts to HHS, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and other domestic agencies, are dealing devastating blows to STI surveillance, prevention, and research and development efforts. The suspension of foreign assistance and the withdrawal of the US from WHO only exacerbate the devastation.

In response, seven researchers from leading institutions ([link removed]) , whose work has focused on improving STI prevention and diagnostics to ensure today’s tools reach the people most impacted, shared the impact these funding cuts have taken on their research and the communities they serve.

Read AVAC’s Alison Footman’s opinion editorial in the BodyPro ([link removed]) , which documents it all.
Key Takeaways from the STI & HIV 2025 World Congress

[link removed]

The STI & HIV 2025 World Congress ([link removed]) brought together over 1,400 researchers, healthcare providers, implementers, advocates, funders and industry representatives in Montreal this past July, where they shared urgent insights, promising innovations, and calls to action. The gathering came at a pivotal moment when STI rates are rising globally, highlighting the importance of people-centered approaches, addressing stigma, and the need for new vaccines and diagnostics. All this amid massive disruptions caused by shifts in US policies and funding and decreased investments from other funders. As Jeanne Marrazzo, the NIAID Director currently on administrative leave who spoke in her personal capacity said in the closing plenary, “progress is possible, but only with clear-eyed urgency and coordinated commitment.”
Read the Recap ([link removed])
Moving the Global STI Response Forward: Insights from Advocacy Partners

[link removed]

In Montreal, AVAC connected with STI advocacy leaders including Cleopatra Mpaso ([link removed]) of Pangaea Zimbabwe, Mandisa Mdingi ([link removed]) of the Foundation for Professional Development in South Africa, and Felix Mogaka ([link removed]) of the Kenya Medical Research Institute to capture their perspectives on the future of STI prevention, diagnostics, and care. Mpaso, Mdingi, and Mogaka identified challenges that are important in moving the STI response forward: unstable funding and the need to translate guidelines into action; a lack of clear, community-driven data to push governments beyond syndromic management toward diagnostic testing; ongoing stigma that discourages people from seeking services; and the exclusion of community voices from shaping research agendas.
read more ([link removed])


**
------------------------------------------------------------

Save the Date!
Beyond Borders: Reclaiming Voices in Global STI & HIV Prevention

October 29, 2025 at 8:00am EDT/14h00 SAST

Join ISSTDR, IUSTI, the STI & HIV 2025 World Congress, and AVAC for a special webinar spotlighting speakers who were not able to join the congress due to financial and political barriers. Presenters will share their findings, debate their results, and discuss the work still ahead for the STI field. Don’t miss this opportunity to engage directly with cutting-edge research and the people driving it forward.
register ([link removed])


** A Q&A with Alison Footman
------------------------------------------------------------

AVAC’s Senior Program Manager for STIs, Dr. Alison Footman, is currently in Iceland for a Fulbright Specialist Project at the Directorate of Health, working with local leaders to address rising STI rates and strengthen prevention strategies. In this Q&A, ([link removed]) Footman shares her perspective on what’s next for STI research and programs.
read the Q&A ([link removed])
What We're Reading

• WHO expands guidance on sexually transmitted infections and reviews country progress on policy implementation ([link removed]) : The WHO released new guidance on STIs alongside data on national policy implementation. These guidelines aim to strengthen STI prevention, screening, diagnosis, and treatment, especially in high-burden, resource-limited settings, while also tracking both progress and persistent gaps in how countries put STI policies into action.
• Racing against antibiotic resistance ([link removed]) : This in-depth piece highlights the alarming rate of antibiotic resistance, especially among STIs like gonorrhea. As antibiotic resistance increases, research funding to better understand resistance patterns and develop new treatments has declined due to NIH grant cancellations. Improve diagnostics and vaccines could help to better address and prevent antimicrobial resistance. See Impact Global Health’s new report: Irresistible: developing new solutions for antimicrobial resistant STIs ([link removed]) .
• What $2.5 billion can do: Four innovations advancing women’s health ([link removed]) : The Gates Foundation's recent $2.5 billion R&D commitment to women's health through 2030 includes four groundbreaking innovations, self-administered contraceptive path, rapid STI diagnostics, AI-enabled ultrasound, and vaginal health therapies that can restore and maintain an optimal vaginal environment. This commitment signals that women’s health is important and new solutions are on the horizon.

Best,

AVAC
Follow us @hivpxresearch ([link removed])
[link removed] [link removed] [link removed]
Share this issue ([link removed])
AVAC Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention
+1 212 796 6423 [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) www.avac.org ([link removed])
You're receiving this because you signed up for our newsletter. Not interested any longer?
Manage email preferences | ([link removed]) Unsubscribe ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis