Title: HIVAIDS: Modes, Models, and Mitigation
1HIV/AIDS Modes, Models, and Mitigation
COA Scientific Symposium, June 07 CDR Scott
Giberson, PH-C, RPh, MPH National HIV/AIDS
Principal Consultant, IHS
2Objectives
- Provide an update of HIV/AIDS epidemiology
globally and in the US - Illustrate transmission modes, public health and
ecological models via discussion of a
comprehensive HIV/AIDS Program - Discuss HIV risk, vulnerability, and similarities
of indigenous populations - Enumerate and discuss prevention / mitigation
models and strategies.
3- I am an invisible man invisible understand,
simply because people refuse to see me - Ralph Ellison, 1952
- 64.9 million people infected with HIV
- since the pandemic began
- 39.5 million (34.147.1 million) PLWH/A
- Will be 3rd leading cause of death in roughly
- 10 years. Why does HIV become even more
- critical?
4Worldwide Incidence and Prevalence
- Total 4.3 million (3.66.6 million) new
infections in 2006 - Total deaths in 2006 2.9 million
- HIV/AIDS is the fourth (set to be third) leading
cause of death globally, but leading cause age
20-24 - 4.9 million new HIV infections (2004)
- 5 million new HIV infections (2006)
5Worldwide Prevalence Estimates
- 15-34
- 5-15
- 1-5
- 0.5 1
- 0.1-0.5
- lt 0.1
6Gender Differences by Area
Suggestive of transmission categories and models
7HIV/AIDS in the US
- Est. 850-950K PLWH/A
- Est. 24 unaware
- Incident cases 40,000
- Deaths16,000
- - both have remained relatively stable since
1998 - Incidence increased 14 among MSM and 10 among
heterosexuals. - Perinatal 100 cases /yr
8HIV/AIDS in the US
9HIV/AIDS in the US
10HIV/AIDS in the US
Ages 20 - 49
11Modes of Transmission
MSM and IDU 14
Hetero32
MSM 49
IDU 4
12Modes of Transmission
MSM and IDU 14
Hetero32
MSM 49
IDU 4
13Transmission Modes and Models
- 4 modes of transmission
- Blood
- Semen
- Vaginal fluid
- Breast milk
- Global models reflect modes of transmission,
epidemiology and higher risk groups - African Model vs Asian Model
- US Model? Half-full or half-empty
14Models of Intervention
- Treatment Centered
- greater impact on short and near-term mortality
- can enable more effective prevention
- data modeling 10 increase in infections and
9-13 - reduction in mortality within 5 years1
- Prevention Centered
- greater impact on incidence
- long-term mortality trend more favorable
- data modeling 36 reduction in infections and
mortality - reductions are similar treatment-centered
model after - 10-15 years1
- Variable results based on current prevalence
1. Salomon et al, Jan 2005
15Impact of Models
- Demonstrates the importance of epidemiology,
transmission modes, and mitigation models - Given limited resources, budgets can be directed
in the most appropriate way - In the long term, both preventive and combination
strategies will reduce resource needs for
treatment - Effective treatment as preventive strategy
- Comprehensive strategies are most effective both
in theory and in practice.
16Comprehensive HIV/AIDS Program Model (Priority
Areas)
17Indigenous Populations Vulnerabilities
- Access to health services
- Resource-constrained settings
- Mobile populations
- Health is interwoven with culture
- Tradition may suppress open discussion or
implementation strategies - Socioeconomic may affect impact
- Lack of indigenous workforce
- Health disparities
18Global Contexts of Vulnerability
- Governments Policy
- Socio-economic status
- Spirituality
- Gender / Youth
- Culture
- Challenges of a Cultural Approach
19Specific AI/AN Similarities
- Health not just physiological
- Wellness rooted in spirituality and culture
- Unique govt to govt relationship and Hx
- Health status is a linkage between all sectors of
influence - Socio-economic status
- Youth of the population
- Participation of AI/AN in all programs is
necessary for success - Health disparities and contexts of risk
- Culture has influence over behavior
20Co-Factors of HIV Risk
STD Rates / Sexual behavior
? HIV Risk
Substance Use
Violence/Abuse
Health Disparities, stigma, access, social norms
21Intervention Model
Broad sociocultural / traditionalism/ spiritual
Constructed Environment
Community
Clinical / Facility
Individual
22(No Transcript)
23Implementation Barriers in
Resource-Constrained Settings
- Stigma in facilities and communities
- Jurisdiction in certain situations
- Lack of open discussion and education at all
levels - Lack of human resources with expertise
- Appropriate but competing priorities.
- Complacency ( of cases in US, effect of ARV)
- Gathering data remains complex
- Complexity of treatment and care
- Challenges of developing targeted intervention
for - coverage of vulnerable, hard-to-reach groups
24Proven Mitigation/Prevention Strategies
- Increase knowledge of status
- Changes behavior
- Credible Prevalence
- CDC recommendations (NEW as of 09/2006!!)
- Education/Outreach
- Peer Intervention
- Integrate with other prevention messages
- Client-centered, interactive sessions
- What about school sex-education?
25More Prevention / Mitigation
- Behavior Change
- Normalize HIV
- High risk groups targeted
- BCC tailored to culture
- Multiple sessions
- Harm Reduction
- Effective Treatment as prevention (3 ways)
- Prevent MTCT (augmented by knowledge of status
prior to conception)
Combined outcomes from multiple evidence-based
reports (includes CDC, WHO, other Syringe
Exchange data based on MMWR 2005 54(27)
26New Prevention Technologies
- HIV vaccines
- Vaginal and rectal Microbicides (discussed
earlier) - Adult male circumcision
- Treatment of other STIs
- Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) using
antiretroviral drugs
27Critical Conversation
- Is the ABC method working?
- HIV/AIDS as a chronic disease
- Two biggest concerns regarding HIV/AIDS
- Affects younger population
- Tied mostly to sexual behavior
- Sex education and harm reduction how can we be
more effective within these interventions?
28Recommendations
- Routinize and Normalize HIV testing services
- Reduce stigma and discrimination
- Support testing and knowledge of status
- Integrate HIV message in all other appropriate
health promotion messages - Behavior component integrated in primary care
- Adoption of indigenous perspective and workforce
- Utilize evidence-based strategies - focus on
outcomes - Dont be complacent
29(No Transcript)
30During this 30 minute lecture, 280 people
acquired HIV and roughly 170 people died of AIDS
31- HIV/AIDS is arguably the most critical global
health issue of our generation. As leaders in
public health, let us not be by-standers in the
fight
32Thank you.Questions?
IHS HIV/AIDS Homepage www.ihs.gov/medicalprograms
/hivaids/
COA Scientific Symposium, June 07 CDR Scott
Giberson, PH-C, RPh, MPH National HIV/AIDS
Principal Consultant, IHS