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Supported Activities: Prioritizing High Impact HIV Prevention

The funding opportunity also provides important new guidance to health departments about specific prevention strategies to prioritize. This guidance is intended to ensure that prevention funds are directed to the combinations of activities that are most likely to have a significant and lasting impact on the HIV epidemic.

CDC will fund health department HIV prevention activities in three categories:

1. Core prevention programs ($284M in FY2012)

Here appears an image of a pie chart showing how the first year funds (totaling $358.8 million) for the high impact HIV prevention activities will be allocated: Expanded HIV testing - $54.8 million. Demonstration projects - $20 million. Core prevention programs - $284 millionThe large majority of funding will support health departments’ core HIV prevention programs. At least three-quarters (75 percent) of this core funding must be directed to the following required activities, which have demonstrated potential to reduce new HIV infections:

  • HIV testing: Approximately 240,000 Americans are unaware that they are living with HIV – by learning their status, they can take steps to protect their health and reduce the risk of transmission to others. Supported activities include:
    • Routine opt-out testing of patients ages 13-64 in healthcare settings
    • Targeted testing programs in non-healthcare settings, particularly venues most likely to reach individuals with undiagnosed infections
    • Routine, early HIV screening for all pregnant women
    • Screening for other STDs, hepatitis, and tuberculosis in conjunction with HIV testing
  • Comprehensive prevention with HIV-positive individuals:
    • Linkages to care and treatment, and interventions to improve retention in care and treatment for people living with HIV (studies show that effective treatment can reduce the risk that an HIV-positive person will transmit the virus to others)
    • Behavioral interventions and other risk-reduction services for HIV-positive individuals and their sexual or needle-sharing partners to reduce the likelihood of HIV transmission
    • Interventions to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission
    • Referral to other medical and social services, such as substance abuse and mental health services
  • Condom distribution:
    • Providing condoms to people living with HIV and those at highest risk of infection
  • Policy initiatives:
    • Efforts to align structures, policies, and regulations to enable optimal HIV prevention, care, and treatment (e.g., addressing structural barriers to routine opt-out testing, or updating policies to facilitate sharing of surveillance data across health department programs)

In addition, up to one-quarter (25 percent) of core prevention funding can be used to support other proven HIV activities, including:

  • Evidence-based interventions for high-risk populations:
    • Individual and group-level interventions for HIV-negative people at highest risk of acquiring HIV
    • Community-level interventions to reduce risk behaviors
    • Syringe service programs, where allowable and in accordance with state and local laws
  • Social marketing, media, and mobilization:
    • Marketing campaigns to educate and inform high-risk populations, healthcare providers, and other relevant audiences about HIV
    • Using current technology (e.g., social networking sites, texting, and web applications) to reach the highest-risk populations
    • Community mobilization to raise awareness, fight stigma, and encourage safe behaviors
  • PrEP and nPEP:
    • Planning, education, personnel, and other support for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for men who have sex with men (CDC funds may not be used for the purchase of PrEP medications). For more details on PrEP for men who have sex with men, see CDC’s interim guidance at www.cdc.gov/hiv/prevention/research/prep
    • Non-occupational post-exposure prophylaxis (nPEP) for high-risk groups

The core prevention work described above must be guided and supported by the following health department activities, which are also supported by CDC’s core prevention funding:

  • Jurisdictional HIV prevention planning:
    • All health departments are required to have in place a prevention planning process, including an HIV prevention planning group (formerly HIV Community Planning Group) composed of a broad range of stakeholders across the continuum of HIV prevention, care and treatment services, and people living with HIV
    • In order to streamline and strengthen the HIV planning process, CDC will soon introduce new HIV prevention planning guidelines for health departments and their partners. The new guidelines will be made available on CDC’s website
  • Capacity building and technical assistance:
    • Capacity building assistance for local HIV prevention service providers
    • Training for health department and healthcare facility staff, community-based organizations, and other partners
    • Peer-to-peer consultation and technical assistance
  • Program planning, monitoring and evaluation, and quality assurance:
    • Employing the most current epidemiological and surveillance data to guide planning
    • Developing a comprehensive monitoring, evaluation, and quality assurance plan

2. Expanded HIV testing for disproportionately affected populations ($54.8M in FY 2012)

The 36 jurisdictions with at least 3,000 African American andr Hispanic residents living with an HIV diagnosis in 2008 are eligible for additional funding to expand access to HIV testing for populations disproportionately affected by HIV, including African Americans, Hispanics, men who have sex with men, and injection drug users. Supported activities include:

  • Routine, opt-out HIV screening in healthcare settings serving these populations (at least 70 percent of funding)
  • Targeted HIV testing in non-healthcare venues frequented by high-risk individuals (up to 30 percent of funding)

This funding category builds on CDC’s recent Expanded Testing Initiative, which over a three-year period provided HIV testing services in 25 jurisdictions, diagnosing more than 18,000 individuals who were previously unaware of their HIV infection, 70 percent of whom were African American.

3. Demonstration projects ($20M in FY2012)

CDC’s health department HIV prevention funding opportunity includes a competitive category for demonstration projects designed to evaluate innovative approaches to HIV prevention. All jurisdictions can submit proposals for demonstration projects, and award decisions will be based on merit. Given the rapidly evolving nature of prevention science, health departments are invited to submit proposals for this category in the current funding cycle, 2013, and 2014.

Potential focus areas for demonstration projects include:

  • Structural, behavioral, or biomedical interventions, individually or in combination, that will have high impact on reducing new HIV infections
  • HIV testing approaches that increase identification of undiagnosed infections or improve cost effectiveness
  • Enhanced linkage to and retention in medical care for individuals living with HIV
  • Advanced use of technology (e.g., internet services, electronic medical records) to prevent HIV infections
  • Innovative use of CD4, viral load, and other surveillance data for HIV prevention
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