WHAT WORKS, AND WHAT REMAINS TO BE DONE, IN HIV PREVENTION IN THE UNITED STATES
- 1 April 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Public Health
- Vol. 27 (1) , 261-275
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144454
Abstract
▪ Abstract Since the beginning of the HIV epidemic in the United States, HIV prevention programs have prevented hundreds of thousands of HIV infections, and the investment in these programs has actually been cost-saving to society in terms of medical costs averted. A substantial body of evidence exists (including randomized controlled trials and careful meta-analyses) which demonstrates that various HIV prevention services are effective; an increasingly large body of data also demonstrates the cost-effectiveness of these interventions. However, the efforts to utilize these interventions in a comprehensive HIV prevention program are hampered by insufficient funding, imperfect targeting strategies, and a problematic policy environment that creates barriers to the use of some of these life-saving interventions. Progress toward reducing new HIV infections will likely be as much a function of improvements in funding and policies as it will in the development of new tools for HIV prevention.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Proposed Format for Tracking the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionʼs National HIV Prevention GoalJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2005
- Utilizing HIV transmission rates to assist in prioritizing HIV prevention servicesInternational Journal of STD & AIDS, 2004
- HIV Prevention, Cost-Utility Analysis, and Race/Ethnicity: Methodological Considerations and RecommendationsMedical Decision Making, 2004
- Reflections on AIDS, 1981–2031American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2003
- Science, Values and the Public Health AgenciesAIDS Education and Prevention, 2003
- Estimating the effectiveness and efficiency of US HIV prevention efforts using scenario and cost-effectiveness analysisAIDS, 2002
- A Framework for Gauging the Comprehensiveness of Governmental HIV Prevention ProgramsJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2002
- Associations between HIV-positive individuals' receipt of ancillary services and medical care receipt and retentionAIDS Care, 2002
- Handbook of Economic Evaluation of HIV Prevention ProgramsPublished by Springer Nature ,1998
- Reconstruction and Future Trends of the AIDS Epidemic in the United StatesScience, 1991