The situation is that if a woman is infected with HIV, becomes pregnant, and is delivering a baby, and there is no treatment available, no prevention, then the risk that the baby will be infected is about 30% to 40%. However, if we give her the right drugs, the drugs that we also use for treatment, and we also provide her with alternative to breastfeeding, then we can reduce that risk to less than 2%.
That is happening in many countries, and we have indeed seen significant progress. With Global Fund support we have treated, so far, about 800,000 women around the world to prevent this transmission. Madame Bruni-Sarkozy is the special ambassador for the Global Fund on that. She is a global ambassador who is going around the world to argue for that and she has helped us tremendously in getting political attention. Indeed, we believe that with these interventions we can virtually eliminate these transmissions. This means that by 2015 we want to have a world where there should be no babies born with HIV. That's the goal.