achieving the goals of the national hiv/aids strategy: an update andrew d. forsyth, ph.d. dhhs/oash...
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Achieving the Goals of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy: An Update
Andrew D. Forsyth, Ph.D.DHHS/OASH Office of HIV/AIDS Policy
Getting to Zero: World AIDS Day 2011 ConferenceDecember 1, 2011
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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The State of the Global AIDS Epidemic
• ~34 million people were living with HIV worldwide at the end of 2010
• New HIV infections declined 21% in 2010 to ~2.7 million from 1997 peak levels
• ART coverage increased 20% in sub-Saharan Africa between 2009 – 2010
• ~2.5 million HIV-associated deaths averted since 1995 due to ART – 700,000 in 2010
• Nearly half of those eligible in low- & middle-income countries are receiving treatment
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Source: UNAIDS, World AIDS Day Report, 2011
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), 2010
• Supported life saving ARV for 3.2 million people, from 2.5 million in 2009
• Supported PMTCT for 600,000 women, allowing 114,000 infants to be born free of HIV
• Provided nearly 11 million people with care• Supported counseling and testing for 33 million
people
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The State of the U.S. Epidemic:
HIV Incidence, 2006 - 2009
• ~1.2 million living with HIV• HIV incidence stable (~50,000)• No overall change in incidence,
however:+21% among people age 13 – 29+34% young MSM+48% among young Black MSM
• HIV continues to threaten U.S. public health, esp. among MSM, racial/ethnic minorities
Sources: Prejean, PlosOne 6[8], 2011; Moore, CID 52[Suppl 2], 2011
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HIV Prevention Through Care & Treatment
United States, 2011
Source: Cohen et al., MMRW, 2011
• 1.2 million people living with HIV• 9.6% of adults tested, past 12 mo.• 20% are unaware of HIV infection• After diagnosis, 77% are linked to
medical care• 51% of whom remain in care• Only 28% of all PLH have
suppressed viral loads• Disparities evident in ART receipt,
achieving viral suppression, and prevention counseling delivery
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Figure 3. Number and percentage of HIV-infected persons engaged in selected stages of the continuum of HIV care – United States
Source: Cohen et al., MMRW, 2011
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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National HIV/AIDS Strategy• White House releases the NHAS
& Implementation Plan – July, 2010
• Nation’s first comprehensive coordinated HIV/AIDS roadmap with clear, measurable goals for 2015
• Refocuses existing efforts to maximize available resources and make the case for new investments
• Seeks a more coordinated national response to the epidemic
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National HIV/AIDS Strategy:Targets for 2015
• Reduce new infections (25%), lower transmission rate (30%), and increase to 90% awareness of HIV+ serostatus
• Improve access to and outcomes of care by linking 80% of PLH to care w/in 3 mo of diagnosis, increase to 80% RW clients in continuous care, and increase to 86% RW clients with permanent housing
• Reduce HIV-related health disparities by increasing by 20% the number of men who have sex with men (MSM), Blacks, and Latinos with undetectable viral load
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NHAS Action Steps:Reducing New Infections
• Intensify HIV prevention efforts in communities where HIV is most heavily concentrated
• Expand targeted efforts to prevent HIV infection using a combination of effective, evidence-based approaches
• Educate all Americans about the threat of HIV and how to prevent it
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NHAS Action Steps:Increasing Access to Care and Improving Health
Outcomes for People Living with HIV
• Establish a seamless system to immediately link people to continuous and coordinated quality care when they learn they are infected with HIV
• Take deliberate steps to increase the number and diversity of available providers of clinical care and related services for people living with HIV
• Support people living with HIV with co-occurring health conditions and those who have challenges meeting their basic needs, such as housing
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NHAS Action Steps:Reducing HIV-Related Disparities
& Health Inequities
• Reduce HIV-related mortality in communities at high risk for HIV infection
• Adopt community-level approaches to reduce HIV infection in high-risk communities
• Reduce stigma and discrimination against people living with HIV
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NHAS Action Steps:Achieving a More Coordinated National
Response to the HIV Epidemic
• Increase the coordination of HIV programs across the Federal government and between Federal agencies and state, territorial, tribal, and local governments
• Develop improved mechanisms to monitor and report on progress toward achieving national goals
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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CDC’s Enhanced Comprehensive HIV Prevention Planning Project (ECHPP)
• 3 year demonstration project• 12 MSAs with highest number of people living with AIDS• Seeks to maximize the impact of HIV prevention, treatment,
and care• Phase I provided $11.6M enhanced planning, coordination,
and implementation (2010)• Phase 2 supports ongoing planning and coordination and
implementation for 2 years (2012 – 2013)• Grantees include state and territorial health departments and
directly-funded local health departments
Source: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/nhas/echpp/
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12 Cities Project: Key Activities
• Builds on CDC’s ECHPP Initiative• Engage relevant HHS agencies (CDC, CMS, HRSA, IHS, NIH,
SAMHSA)• Coordinate and leverage Federal activities and resources • Map Federally-funded HIV/AIDS resources in each jurisdiction• Promote opportunities to blend or braid services and, where
appropriate, funding streams• Identify opportunities to harmonize and streamline data
collection and reporting requirements• Develop common indicators and evaluation strategies
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ECHPP & 12 Cities At-A-GlanceECHPP 12 Cites Project
Lead Entity CDC/DHAP HHS/OASH/OHAP
MSAs (“Cities”) 12 highest AIDS cases, 2007 12 MSAs+
Primary Partners State and local health departments, communities
Federal departments & agencies, advocates
NHAS Targets HIV/AIDS infections, Care, Disparities (1, 2, 3)
Coordinate national response (4)
Goal Enhance planning, coordination, implementation
Concentrate Federal resources for maximal impact on epidemic
Key Activities • Review resource allocations• Maximize impact on incidence w/data-driven decision-making• Deploy required, recommended, and innovative interventions to scale• Conduct monitoring and evaluation• Extract lessons from 12 MSAs
• Map federal resources in MSAs• Address gaps in program coverage and scale• Coordinate services/funding• Develop common indicators• Streamline reporting requirements• Apply lessons nationally
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12 Cities Project Status• Set aside $15 million SMAI-F for effective programs• Fostered new collaborations among non-HHS agencies (e.g., HIV
and housing)• Initiated a review of data collection and federal reporting
requirements• Provided technical guidance on State Plan development• Identified core indicators for assessing HIV-prevention, treatment,
and care services funded by HHS• Issued a 1-yr contract to define and evaluate coordination and
collaboration in implementing the 12 Cities Project
12 Cities: Seven Lessons Learned
1. Improve Federal communication2. Enhance coordination and collaboration3. Map Federal resources4. Enhance the provision of technical assistance5. Streamline Federal reporting requirements6. Encourage the effective integration of prevention,
treatment, and care7. Facilitate planning
DHHS NHAS Implementation Working Group Meeting – Sept 2011
• Attended by HHS/OASH, ONAP, and HHS OPDivs (e.g., CDC, HRSA, NIH) and Staff Offices (e.g., OMH, OWH).
• Goal: To provide updates on progress toward achieving NHAS targets as described in the HHS Operational Plan.
• Cross-cutting issues: – Opportunities to better address needs of high priority groups– Consideration of RW reauthorization in light of ACA– Policy implications of recent scientific developments (HPTN 052)– Plans for IAS 2012– Identify new opportunities for Federal coordination and
collaboration
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HHS Operational Plan: HIV Testing Highlights – Sept, 2011
HHS OS• Deployed FY12 Secretary’s Minority AIDS Initiative to fund new HIV
testing in racial and minorities (CDC, IHS)• Facilitated the enhancement of HIV testing in behavioral health
clinics (SAMHSA)• Developed online links to HIV testing locations, federally funded
care clinics, housing, and other supports via AIDS.gov• Hosted WG meetings with Faith Leaders to encourage HIV testing
and fight HIV-related stigma• Will finalize recommendations to HHS/OS on core indicators, data
streamlining, and reducing grantee reporting requirements (Dec., 2011)
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HHS Operational Plan: HIV Testing Highlights – Sept, 2011
CDC• Implemented Expanded Testing Initiative• Launched ECHPP in 12 MSAs with greatest AIDS burden, and
revolutionized program planning and implementation• Launched new Health Department FOA, emphasizing high
impact prevention in areas of greatest need.• Developed new HIV testing and linkage initiatives for MSM,
young MSM and Transgender persons of Color• Will finalize HIV testing guidelines in non-clinical settings (with
HRSA/SAMSHA)• Will launch a new social marketing campaign and test
combination prevention targeted to Latino communities
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HHS Operational Plan: HIV Testing Highlights – Sept, 2011
IHS• Doubled new sites for Expanded Testing Initiative, including
Tribal and Tribal organizations• Increased HIV tests ~20% between 2009-2010
SAMHSA• Issued new FY12 Block Grant focuses on HIV testing• Issued an FOA to expand integrated behavioral health and HIV
care for racial/ethnic minorities in 12 Cities• Will finalize a needs assessment on HIV testing capacity in
substance use and mental health clinics• Will issue guidance on improving linkage to substance use
treatment and mental health services for PLH
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HHS Operational Plan: HIV Testing Highlights – Sept, 2011
HRSA• Released a Program Assistance Letter to ensure medical providers
at its 1,100 health centers comply with routine HIV testing recommendations
• Hosted web-based training to National Health Service Corps clinicians on HIV testing
• Will work with Federal partners to use SPNS data to improve linkage to care following an HIV diagnosis
FDA• Approved ARCHITECT Ag/Ab Combo assay, a 4th generation
diagnostic test that can detect both antigen and antibodies for HIV• Approved INSTI™ HIV-1 Antibody test, yields results in 60 seconds
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HHS Operational Plan: HIV Testing Highlights – Sept, 2011
CMS• Expanded Medicare to cover HIV screening tests (2009)• Enhanced the Women’s Preventive Service to include HIV
testing (Aug, 2011)
NIH• Funded new grants on peer-driven or network-based testing
(Gwadz DA34083; Latkin DA32217), increasing screening for acute HIV infection (Remien MH92187), and molecular epidemiology of HIV transmission (Chan AI96923)
• Fielded HPTN 065/TLC+, a feasibility study of community-level test, linkage, and treatment strategy in the U.S.
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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Reducing HIV Incidence: Challenges & Opportunities
• Cultural shift from risk-based to routine HIV testing
• Challenges in identifying acute HIV infection• Information gap about effective combinations
of interventions• Ongoing structural challenges of incorporating
HIV prevention into systems of care
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Access to Care: Challenges & Opportunities
• Lack of precise population-based estimates of number of infected persons not in care/treatment
• Disconnect between systems of care (public/private, vertical federal programs)
• Lack of a unified national electronic medical record (EMR)• Need to identify resources to support organizational
components for linkage/retention in care• Must prepare workforce for a larger number of newly
diagnosed persons
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Reducing HIV Health Disparities: Challenges & Opportunities
• Inadequate surveillance capacity to routinely monitor community viral load
• Ongoing HIV stigma, confounded by racism, sexism, homophobia, transgender phobia
• Preparing community health workers to incorporate NHAS into their service agendas
• Lack data about structural interventions to influence social determinants of health
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Improving Federal Coordination: Challenges & Opportunities
• Lack of common definitions, metrics, & policies in funding announcements
• Multiple, often independent processes for making recommendations about testing & treatment
• Federal data systems are not typically interoperable• Striking an appropriate balance between
organizational centralization and decentralization: policy, practice, priority setting
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Presentation Outline
• HIV/AIDS epidemiological update• National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS)• Implementation progress • Ongoing challenges• Future directions
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NHAS Implementation
• Strategy at work through federal agencies (Ops Plans)• New strategic investments (ECHPP, ADAP, MAI)• Make necessary policy changes (funding formulas, HD FOA)
Next steps• Strengthen new state, city, local, and tribal partnerships• Empower communities to implement NHAS• Define common metrics to measure progress• Streamline administrative burden while maintaining
accountabilitySource: http://aids.gov/federal-resources/policies/national-hiv-aids-strategy/hiv_aids_july_2011.pdf
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“What Can I Do?”• Read the Strategy and accompanying Federal Implementation Plan
available online at AIDS.gov• Follow updates on the Strategy blog (blog.aids.gov), which features
posts from the Office of National AIDS Policy, HHS officials, and others.• Inform others about the Strategy and encourage their engagement in
activities that help achieve its goals.• Discuss what your agency or organization can do in new or different
ways to better serve your constituents and align your efforts with the Strategy
• Participate in state and local discussions about how HIV prevention, care and treatment efforts can better serve vulnerable populations
• Engage new partners in HIV prevention, care, treatment and stigma-reduction efforts to strengthen our collective efforts
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Vision of the NHAS
“The United States will become a place wherenew infections are rare and when they do occur,
every person, regardless of age, gender,race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender
identity or socio-economic circumstance, willhave unfettered access to high quality, life
extending care, free from stigma anddiscrimination.”
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