HIV up close, for article on mother-to-child HIV transmission

The Bahamas officially eliminates mother-to-child transmission of HIV

The Bahamas has become the 12th country or territory in the Americas to receive World Health Organization certification for eliminating mother-to-child transmission of HIV — a milestone that means children in the island nation are now born free of the virus by design, not by chance.

At a glance

  • WHO certification: The Bahamas met the global standard requiring a mother-to-child HIV transmission rate below 2% and an incidence below 0.3 per 1,000 live births, sustained over time.
  • Universal antenatal care: All pregnant women in The Bahamas receive HIV screening at their first prenatal appointment and again in the third trimester — regardless of nationality or legal status.
  • EMTCT Plus Initiative: The certification is part of a broader regional effort to eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B, and congenital Chagas disease across the Americas by 2030 C.E.

How The Bahamas got here

The achievement did not happen overnight. It was built on a comprehensive public health model that integrates HIV prevention directly into standard maternal care.

The country’s Maternal and Child Health programme coordinates with its National Infectious Disease Programme to ensure that every pregnant woman — not just those flagged as high-risk — receives consistent testing and follow-up. HIV-positive mothers receive antiretroviral medicines through multi-month dispensing, and exposed infants are monitored closely. The government also introduced pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for pregnant women, a step that goes beyond the minimum certification requirements.

STI treatment and family planning services are offered free of charge. That policy choice — removing cost as a barrier — is central to why the model works across The Bahamas’ scattered archipelago of more than 700 islands.

“A lot of people have been involved in us achieving this great milestone — our nurses in our public health system, our nurses and doctors in our tertiary health-care system, and all of the clinics spread throughout our archipelago,” said Dr. Michael Darville, The Bahamas’ Minister of Health and Wellness.

A regional movement gaining momentum

The Bahamas joins a list that began with Cuba in 2015 C.E. — the first country in the world to receive this certification — and most recently included Brazil in 2025 C.E. More than half of all countries and territories that have achieved elimination globally are now from Latin America and the Caribbean.

That concentration is not coincidental. The Pan American Health Organization’s Elimination Initiative has set a regional target of eliminating more than 30 communicable diseases by 2030 C.E., and mother-to-child HIV transmission is one of its clearest success stories.

“Latin America and the Caribbean has long been a region of progress in this global effort,” said Anurita Bains, Global Associate Director for HIV/AIDS at UNICEF. “Today, more than half of all countries and territories that have achieved elimination are from this region.”

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called it an “outstanding achievement” reflecting years of political commitment and health worker dedication. UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima pointed to the underlying logic: “When women can test early in pregnancy, start treatment quickly, and stay in care, every child has a better chance of being born free of HIV.”

What elimination actually means — and what it doesn’t

It’s important to be precise about the word “elimination.” WHO certification does not mean HIV has been eradicated from The Bahamas. Adults still contract the virus, and ongoing treatment and prevention work remains essential. Certification means the transmission pathway from mother to child has been reduced to a statistically negligible level — a narrow but profound victory.

Sustaining that standard also requires continuous effort. Surveillance systems, drug supply chains, and health worker training must all remain intact. Countries can lose certification if standards slip, which is why The Bahamas has committed to ongoing integrated primary care and monitoring even after receiving the designation.

There are also gaps the certification process doesn’t fully capture — including how well services reach migrant women, incarcerated women, or those in the most remote island communities. The Bahamas’ model of nationality-blind antenatal care is a meaningful attempt to address that, but health equity advocates note that implementation quality across dispersed populations is harder to measure than aggregate statistics suggest.

A proof of concept for the world

What The Bahamas demonstrates is that elimination is achievable even in a small island nation with a geographically fragmented health system — conditions that might seem like structural disadvantages. Universal access, integrated care, and consistent political investment were enough to clear the bar.

That proof matters well beyond the Caribbean. Dozens of countries are still working toward elimination, and the Caribbean model offers a scalable template: screen universally, treat promptly, remove financial barriers, and maintain surveillance.

For the children born in The Bahamas today, the practical meaning is simple. They enter the world without a preventable virus their mothers might have passed on. That outcome — achievable, replicable, and now certified — is what the global health system has been building toward for decades.

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