25/06/2026 19:56 - Salud
Four years after Argentina passed its Comprehensive HIV Law, the country still faces significant barriers to early virus detection. Statistics reveal that late diagnosis remains a structural problem, particularly affecting vulnerable populations throughout this South American nation of 46 million people.
Argentina's public healthcare system is free and universal, yet sexually transmitted infections (STIs) show worrying trends. According to recent data, syphilis recorded 46,799 cases during 2025—the highest number since records began, with a rate of 117.2 cases per 100,000 inhabitants.
76% of cases occur in people between 15 and 39 years old, with the 20-24 age group being the most affected. In Córdoba—Argentina's second-largest province, located in the country's geographic center—authorities reported 7,507 cases in 2025, representing an 8.3% increase compared to 2024.
Córdoba is home to approximately 3.6 million people and is one of Argentina's most important economic and cultural centers outside Buenos Aires.
Passed in June 2022, this landmark legislation aims to guarantee universal access to diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of HIV throughout Argentina. Key provisions include:
Testing centers concentrate in major urban areas like Buenos Aires, Rosario, and Córdoba, leaving rural populations—particularly in northern provinces like Chaco and Formosa—without timely access
Despite legal protections, discrimination continues to discourage many Argentinians from getting tested, particularly in conservative regions and smaller communities
Many Argentinians still lack knowledge about transmission, symptoms, and the crucial importance of early diagnosis—particularly among youth and older adults
Early HIV diagnosis is fundamental for multiple reasons that directly impact public health:
| Benefit | Impact on Patients |
|---|---|
| Early treatment initiation | Significantly improves quality of life and increases life expectancy to near-normal levels |
| Viral load reduction | When viral load becomes undetectable, transmission risk drops to essentially zero—a concept known as Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U) |
| Prevention of complications | Avoids progression to AIDS and opportunistic infections that can be life-threatening |
| Appropriate medical follow-up | Enables continuous monitoring and treatment adjustments as needed |
In 2025, Argentina's Ministry of Health created the Ministerial STI Roundtable (Mesa Ministerial de ITS) to coordinate nationwide actions. Health specialists recommend:
Argentina's public hospitals offer free, confidential HIV testing. Results typically available within 15-30 minutes using rapid testing technology.
Source: Infobrisas - https://www.infobrisas.com/noticias/2026/06/24/99268-a-cuatro-anos-de-la-ley-integral-persisten-barreras-para-la-deteccion-del-vih
Alfredo S. Quiroga