The alarm bells are faint but unmistakable: Pakistan is facing an unprecedented surge in HIV infections just when many had believed the epidemic was stabilising. In recent years the country has seen what experts are calling rekha fāza (record levels) of new HIV diagnoses — not yet apocalyptic, but serious enough to demand urgent action if the momentum is not to turn into something far more devastating.
According to a recent article in Gulf News, the number of registered HIV cases in Pakistan has been climbing at a pace that alarms health authorities — the latest data show tens of thousands of new diagnoses that suggest the epidemic is no longer confined to marginalised or isolated outbreaks. Meanwhile, a study in the World Journal of Clinical Infectious Diseases reports that in the first nine months of 2024 Pakistan recorded over 9,700 new HIV infections — a figure that could exceed 12,950 by year-end, surpassing the 12,731 new cases documented in 2023. These numbers are especially troubling given that official prevalence remains relatively low in the general population (estimated at 0.2% of those aged 15-49 in 2022) by international standards. A closer look reveals uncomfortable truths. The country’s National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) reports that by June 2025 some 78,734 HIV cases had been registered, of which 55,562 were on antiretroviral therapy (ART). Yet even this may be the tip of the iceberg: estimates suggest hundreds of thousands more may be living with HIV but undiagnosed, untreated or unreported. Historically the epidemic in Pakistan has been concentrated among key populations—people who inject drugs, men who have sex with men, sex workers, and the transgender community. But what makes the current situation especially alarming is the evidence of spread beyond those groups into broader, more vulnerable sectors of society: children, women, rural populations and people who may not self-identify as high-risk.
Cultural and systemic factors in Pakistan amplify the challenge. Deep-seated sharam (stigma) associated with HIV and AIDS means many people avoid testing or hide their status, which prevents timely treatment and fuels transmission. Then there is the matter of unsafe healthcare practices—unscreened blood transfusions, reuse of syringes, and weak infection-control in some clinics. In a society where discussing sexual health openly remains difficult, and where health literacy remains low in many regions, efforts at awareness-raising often struggle to gain traction. The Urdu term taleem (education/awareness) comes into sharp focus here.
In Pakistan’s sociocultural landscape, honour, reputation and community standing are deeply intertwined: an HIV diagnosis may bring social ostracism or rejection not just of the person but of the entire family. As a result many prefer silence over disclosure, and avoid seeking help until the disease has progressed significantly. At the same time, outreach services among marginalised groups—such as hijra (transgender) communities—face structural barriers such as discrimination, violence or simply lack of access. A recent article in The Guardian on Pakistan’s trans community underlines how many live in shared dwellings (deras) under a guru-chela system, often in precarious circumstances, placing them at heightened risk of HIV and other infections.
There are positive signs, however. The NACP’s registration and treatment numbers show that the system is working—some people are being reached, treated and supported. But the gap between those registered and those estimated to be living with HIV remains large. To change the trajectory, experts argue Pakistan needs a muktamilī (integrated) response: expanded testing, strengthened surveillance, universal access to ART, harm-reduction strategies for people who use drugs, safe blood supply, and breaking down stigma through culturally sensitive engagement.
Ultimately, the issue transcends medical treatment. It is as much about social attitudes, community trust, and the empowerment of marginalised voices. If Pakistan fails to arrest this rise now, the human cost will grow not just in terms of health but in the broader dimensions of loss and inequality. That prospect calls for bold action and societal reflection — because behind the numbers are lives, families, and communities quietly crying out for change.
