#FundHerHealth #8RforEquity
The world is at a tipping point.
Rising inequalities, shrinking civic space, climate shocks, economic instability, and a growing gender backlash are converging into a global crisis. These are not abstract policy challenges—they are direct threats to the health, rights, and lives of women and girls in all their diversity living and/or affected by HIV, TB, Malaria. And when women and girls are pushed out of care, denied agency, or left without protection, the ripple effects are profound: families suffer, communities weaken, and public health systems fracture.
The erosion of women and girls’ health is not a siloed issue—it’s a warning sign of deeper systemic failure. Without bold, gender-transformative action, we risk losing decades of hard-fought progress against HIV, TB, and malaria, and undermining the resilience of global health altogether.
In this moment of urgent reckoning, the choices we make will define the world we live in tomorrow.
That’s why we are proud to launch the 8th Replenishment Campaign: a bold, feminist, community-led call to fully fund the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria in 2025.
What’s at the Heart of This Campaign?
At its core lies a simple, urgent truth:
To truly end the world’s deadliest epidemics, we must invest in what matters most—gender equality, human rights, and community leadership.
We are mobilising to ensure that the Global Fund 8th Replenishment isn’t just about numbers—it’s about people, power, and gender justice, it is about women and girls in all of their diversity . It’s about fueling health systems that are inclusive, resilient, and feminist by design. And it’s about guaranteeing that women, girls, and gender-diverse communities are not left behind
Introducing Our Campaign Identity: Replenish the World
Our visual identity—a flowing figure 8—symbolizes continuity, transformation, and the wave of collective action rising from the grassroots. It’s a reminder that change happens when we move together in our diversity.Our campaign slogan says it all:
Replenish the world: Invest in What Matters Most.
#FundHerHealth | #8RforEquity | #8ReplenishmentForEquity

What’s Coming: Strategy in Action
Over the next several months, we’ll be rolling out powerful actions and materials to mobilise, inform, and advocate. Here’s what you can expect:
Evidence-Based Storytelling
- Real voices from the frontlines: testimonies from women, girls, and gender-diverse leaders whose lives and communities have been transformed by the Global Fund investments, contributing to ending AIDS, TB,and malaria.
- Short videos, infographics, and quote cards that show why feminist health funding delivers impact – returning gains for each invested dollar in the Global Fund—and what we risk if we underfund it.
Digital mobilisation & targeted advocacy
- A social media campaign to amplify the message: #8ReplenishmentForEquity #FundHerHealth is a demand for justice.
- Infographics, advocacy letters, and technical briefs tailored to amplify advocacy actions towards donors and policymakers.
- A communications toolkit to empower our W4GF advocates, W4GF National Focal Points and Flourishers across regions.
Advocacy roadmaps & learning spaces
- A regionally tailored 8th Replenishment Advocacy Toolkit launching in September
- A multilingual global webinar to share tools, guidance, and campaign actions
Political action & accountability
- Open letters and petitions calling for bold political and financial commitments for the #8ReplenishmentForEquity
- Letter deliveries to major Global Fund donor countries
Community and women leadership front and center
- Continued mentorship and peer-to-peer programs for advocates.
- Monthly social media challenges to celebrate and amplify local advocates
Why this matters now
The Global Fund is not just a funding mechanism—it’s a lifeline.
It has saved over 65 million lives, invested more than US $63 billion, and scaled up rights-based, gender, community-led health systems across more than 100 countries. It directly funds peer navigators, HIV prevention for adolescent girls, malaria services for pregnant women and children, TB diagnostic tools and ino, GBV response for survivors, legal reform, and community health workers—most of them women.
But the work is far from over. Without sustained and gender-transformative investments, the three diseases will roar back—stronger and more unequal than before.
Now, the Global Fund must secure a minimum funding of US$ 18 billion to sustain the fight against the three diseases.