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National HIV Prevention Progress Report, 2013 National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention.

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Presentation on theme: "National HIV Prevention Progress Report, 2013 National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention."— Presentation transcript:

1 National HIV Prevention Progress Report, 2013 National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention

2 Acknowledgements Program Evaluation Branch Dale Stratford (Chief), Barb Maciak, Patricia Dietz, Janet Heitgerd, Michelle Van Handel Quantitative Sciences and Data Management Branch Timothy Green (Chief) HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch Irene Hall (Chief), Stacy Cohen, Patricia Sweeney Prevention Communication Branch Nick DeLuca (Chief), Hadiza Buge, Michael LaFlam Behavioral and Clinical Surveillance Branch Buzz Prejean (Chief), Jacek Skarbinski, Gabriella Paz-Bailey, Teresa Finlayson, Emma Frazier DHAP Office of the Director Michael Bonds, Chris Cagle, Janet Cleveland, Laura Coker, Selena Gonzalez, Norma Harris, Amy Lasky, Stan Lehman, Donna McCree, Jono Mermin, Angel Ortiz-Ricard, David Purcell, Wendy Riser, Rich Wolitski

3 National HIV Prevention Progress Report New report –Released December 2, 2013 –Synthesizes data from CDC surveillance systems to describe progress on key indicators –First report presents baseline and available results for 2011 Available at: CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)

4 On-Line Resources Available at: CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.hiv.gov/hiv/policies/npr)CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.hiv.gov/hiv/policies/npr)

5 On-Line Resources Available at: CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv.policies/npr)CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv.policies/npr)

6 On-Line Resources Available at: CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)

7 On-Line Resources Available at: CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)CDC HIV Website (www.cdc.gov/hiv/policies/npr)

8 National HIV/AIDS Strategy Improving Outcomes: Accelerating Progress Along the HIV Care Continuum Office of National AIDS Policy December 2013 report –State of epidemic –Recommendations of HIV Care Continuum Working Group –Local successes –Public-private partnerships Available at: Office of National AIDS Policy Website (www.whitehouse.gov/onap)Office of National AIDS Policy Website (www.whitehouse.gov/onap)

9 National HIV Prevention Progress Report 21 DHAP Strategic Plan Indicators –Reduce new HIV infections –Improve access to HIV care and health outcomes –Reduce HIV-related health disparities

10 Also Monitored For… National HIV/AIDS Strategy Government Performance and Results Act Healthy People 2020 HHS Core HIV Indicators

11 Data Sources and Results Based on data from 3 CDC sources –National HIV Surveillance System –Medical Monitoring Project –National HIV Behavioral Surveillance System

12 Data Sources and Results Describes results Before DHAP Strategic Plan implementation (2006-2010) 1 st year of implementation (2011) In relation to 2015 goals and annual targets Key subgroups Gender, race/ethnicity, age, transmission risk

13 Baselines, Goals and Targets Baseline years and 2015 goals established in NHAS and the DHAP Strategic Plan were maintained Annual targets established to monitor interim progress –Targets based on expectation that progress will accelerate as the strategic plan is more fully implemented

14 Annual Targets: Percentage of Total Change

15 Results Show Encouraging Signs of Progress, Yet Challenges Remain 62% of annual targets were met or exceeded (13 of 21 indicators) Includes 7 NHAS indicators 24% showed no change or moved away from annual target (5 of 21 indicators) 14% could not be compared with annual target (3 of 21 indicators)

16 Reduce New HIV Infections Compared to 2006, there were 1,100 fewer new HIV infections in 2010 New HIV infections remain unacceptable high

17 Reduce New HIV Infections Promising progress in some groups –15% decrease among heterosexuals –22% decrease among IDUs –21% decrease among African American women For 2010 versus 2008.

18 Reduce New HIV Infections 2010 targets not met for Hispanics and gay, bisexual and other MSM Significant increase among MSM –12% overall –22% among youth (13-24 years old) For 2010 versus 2008.

19 Reduce Sexual Risk Behavior among MSM Serodiscordant sex at last sext did not decline MMWR. November 29, 2013.

20 More People Are Living with HIV More than 1.1 million people living with HIV Number of people living with HIV increased 9% from 2006-2010

21 Reduce HIV Transmission HIV transmission rate decreased 9% from 2006- 2010 –4.2 new HIV infections per 100 PLWH in 2010 Fewer HIV infections are being transmitted on average by PLWH

22 Increase Knowledge of HIV Positive Status Consistent improvement each year 5 of 6 PLWH in 2010 knew their serostatus –1 of 6 PLWH did not know their serostatus

23 Increase Linkage to HIV Medical Care Baseline: 65% 2011: 79.8% linked to care –Number of areas with complete data increasing: 13 in 2009 14 in 2010 19 in 2011

24 Reduce HIV-Related Disparities: Linkage to HIV Medical Care 2015 goal was 75% or greater for all groups Met or exceeded for all groups in 2011 CDC increased 2015 goal to 85% or greater for all groups –Based on revised goal, 2011 target was: Not met for Blacks/African Americans (75.9%) Not met for Hispanics/Latinos (81.8%) Met for Whites (85.1%) Met for Persons of Other Race/Ethnicity (85.9%)

25 Increase Viral Suppression among Persons in HIV Medical Care About 3 of 4 people in HIV medical care had achieved viral suppression

26 Reduce HIV-Related Disparities: Viral Suppression Among HIV-Diagnosed Persons 39% of people diagnosed with HIV had suppressed viral load in 2010 2010 targets met for MSM, Blacks/African Americans, and Hispanics/Latinos Results showed movement toward the 2015 goal in all 3 groups

27 Viral Suppression among HIV-Diagnosed Blacks/African Americans

28 Viral Suppression among HIV-Diagnosed Hispanic/Latinos

29 Viral Suppression among HIV-Diagnosed Men Who Have Sex with Men

30 Summary Data show significant progress and continued challenges Achieving 2015 goals will depend on accelerated progress Multiple factors will affect results:  High-Impact Prevention  Increased access to health care –Reduced funding for HIV prevention –Growing number of people living with HIV who need services

31 Summary CDC is working to accelerate progress toward 2015 goals Success depends on progress made at local level Meaningful change takes time and sustained effort –Monitoring progress and using data to improve outcomes are key Partnerships are critical to success


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