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Now that millions of AIDS patients are on treatment, some experts said it is time for the U.N. to focus on other strategies for stopping the outbreak. "We really need to do something about preventing HIV because there are more people getting infected every year than there are being put on treatment," said David Ross, an AIDS expert at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Ross also warned it would be challenging to continue financing AIDS programs, given the financial crisis. Because patients must take AIDS drugs for the rest of their lives, the cost of treatment programs will continue to increase in the future, particularly when drug resistance develops and more expensive drugs are needed. "The fact that WHO has come closer to meeting its target of universal AIDS treatment is certainly a good public relations coup," said Philip Stevens, a director at International Policy Network, a London-based think tank. "Whether or not this is sustainable as billions more dollars are needed in the future is an entirely different question."
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