AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
Illustrating HIV/AIDS in the United States: Hispanic/Latino PersonsAIDSVu
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
Health department announces 41% drop in deaths among black new yorkers living...maisondelamar
The New York City Health Department announced a 41% drop in deaths among black New Yorkers living with HIV/AIDS between 2001 and 2010. However, black New Yorkers still accounted for almost half of new HIV diagnoses in 2010. The Health Department reminds all New Yorkers to get tested for HIV and take necessary precautions, and to get into treatment if positive. National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day on February 7th brings attention to the disproportionate impact of HIV on black communities and the need for continued prevention efforts.
This document summarizes national HIV prevention and care outcomes in the United States. Key metrics monitored include linkage to care after HIV diagnosis, retention in care, and viral suppression. Data on these indicators are collected through the National HIV Surveillance System and used to measure progress towards national goals. The document provides data on these indicators stratified by factors such as age, gender, race/ethnicity, and transmission category. It also discusses calculation methods and presents graphs illustrating trends in various indicators over time and across populations.
This document summarizes HIV and STI surveillance data from the Chicago Department of Public Health. Some key points:
- In 2015, there were 921 new HIV diagnoses in Chicago and 23,355 people living with HIV. Non-Hispanic Blacks had the highest rates of new diagnoses.
- Rates of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis were also highest among Non-Hispanic Blacks.
- The report shows progress in HIV care with 79% linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis, but also highlights ongoing health inequities faced by certain groups.
- Data are used to guide CDPH's efforts in preventing transmission and increasing access to treatment.
The Effect Race and Income on HIV AIDS infection in African-Americans - Sunil...Sunil Nair
Race and Income has a significant influence on susceptibility to HIV/AIDS infections; Afro-Americans (Blacks) are 1.33 times more likely to be infected than whites. A significant finding is that the income level didn't change race's effect on HIV infections. Race has a significant effect on HIV infections or is an important predictor of incidence of HIV infections independent of the income. In other words, irrespective of the income level being black and poor increases the changes of being infected with HIV/AIDS.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
Illustrating HIV/AIDS in the United States: Hispanic/Latino PersonsAIDSVu
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
Health department announces 41% drop in deaths among black new yorkers living...maisondelamar
The New York City Health Department announced a 41% drop in deaths among black New Yorkers living with HIV/AIDS between 2001 and 2010. However, black New Yorkers still accounted for almost half of new HIV diagnoses in 2010. The Health Department reminds all New Yorkers to get tested for HIV and take necessary precautions, and to get into treatment if positive. National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day on February 7th brings attention to the disproportionate impact of HIV on black communities and the need for continued prevention efforts.
This document summarizes national HIV prevention and care outcomes in the United States. Key metrics monitored include linkage to care after HIV diagnosis, retention in care, and viral suppression. Data on these indicators are collected through the National HIV Surveillance System and used to measure progress towards national goals. The document provides data on these indicators stratified by factors such as age, gender, race/ethnicity, and transmission category. It also discusses calculation methods and presents graphs illustrating trends in various indicators over time and across populations.
This document summarizes HIV and STI surveillance data from the Chicago Department of Public Health. Some key points:
- In 2015, there were 921 new HIV diagnoses in Chicago and 23,355 people living with HIV. Non-Hispanic Blacks had the highest rates of new diagnoses.
- Rates of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis were also highest among Non-Hispanic Blacks.
- The report shows progress in HIV care with 79% linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis, but also highlights ongoing health inequities faced by certain groups.
- Data are used to guide CDPH's efforts in preventing transmission and increasing access to treatment.
The Effect Race and Income on HIV AIDS infection in African-Americans - Sunil...Sunil Nair
Race and Income has a significant influence on susceptibility to HIV/AIDS infections; Afro-Americans (Blacks) are 1.33 times more likely to be infected than whites. A significant finding is that the income level didn't change race's effect on HIV infections. Race has a significant effect on HIV infections or is an important predictor of incidence of HIV infections independent of the income. In other words, irrespective of the income level being black and poor increases the changes of being infected with HIV/AIDS.
The document discusses HIV epidemiology in Saskatchewan, highlighting that the province has seen a rapid increase in new HIV cases and now has the highest rates in Canada. It summarizes Saskatchewan's 2010-2013 HIV Strategy, which aims to reduce new infections and improve quality of life for those living with HIV through improved surveillance, clinical management, prevention, and harm reduction programs. The strategy goals include earlier detection of cases, decreasing new infections and sexually transmitted infections, and increasing access to testing, care, and prevention services.
The document summarizes the key points from a quarterly review meeting of India's National AIDS Control Programme. It provides an overview of the program, highlights achievements in reducing HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths, and outlines the vision and targets to end AIDS by 2030. Key agenda items discussed establishing ART centers in all medical colleges, eliminating mother-to-child HIV transmission, implementing the HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 2017, and achieving the 90-90-90 fast track targets to diagnose and treat people living with HIV. Support was requested from states to help scale up HIV testing, treatment and care.
This document provides an organizational chart and descriptions of the STD/HIV surveillance program in Louisiana. It shows the data management and analysis units for STD and HIV data housed in different systems. It also lists contacts for HIV surveillance data and describes how prevention and counseling data are managed. Quick definitions of epidemiological terms and examples of rates and counts are provided.
Latino/Hispanic HIV/AIDS Federal Policy Recommendations: Addressing the Latin...CHAMP Network
The document discusses recommendations to address the Latino/Hispanic HIV/AIDS crisis in the US. It notes that Latinos are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS, with high rates of late testing and AIDS diagnosis. It calls for a comprehensive national HIV/AIDS strategy and heightened response from HHS that increases funding for testing, prevention, and treatment programs tailored to the Latino community. Recommendations include improving data collection, reducing stigma, developing culturally appropriate interventions, and reforming immigration policies to protect the health of people living with HIV/AIDS.
Presentation given at the International Crisis Mappers Conference 2014 was an Ignite Talk on Gender considerations in mapping the Ebola outbreak. The video for the talk can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXbGbWNIaI4
The document discusses the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Kenya. It provides statistics on the number of people living with HIV/AIDS, deaths from AIDS, and new infections in Kenya and worldwide. It then describes the significant demographic, educational, agricultural, health, industrial, social and economic impacts of the epidemic in Kenya, including increased orphan rates, declines in life expectancy, increased burden on the healthcare system, and loss of skilled workers. It notes the government of Kenya has declared AIDS a national disaster and established policies and institutions to accelerate the national response.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
This document contains data from the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention on the epidemiology of HIV infection in the United States through 2013. It includes statistics on HIV diagnoses, living cases, deaths, and AIDS classifications by sex, transmission category, race/ethnicity, age, and year. The data show trends in the HIV epidemic such as male-to-male sexual contact being the most common transmission category and blacks/African Americans having the highest rates of diagnoses and prevalence.
AIDSVu is an online mapping tool that allows users to visually explore HIV prevalence data in the United States. It provides interactive national, state, and local maps showing HIV diagnosis rates by factors like demographic group, transmission route, and medical care access. The goal is to make complex HIV data widely accessible and locally relevant to support prevention and treatment efforts. Maps of Dallas, Texas show diagnosis rates by race, age, sex and ZIP code to understand disparities and plan local responses.
Dr. Kathleen Brady of Philadelphia's AIDS Activities Coordinating Office (AACO) gave this presentation at the January 9, 2013 Comprehensive Planning Committee meeting.
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This study analyzed data from 2009 on newly reported HIV cases and their sexual partners in Dallas County, Texas. Of the 530 sexual partners tested who were contacts of people newly diagnosed with HIV, 74.7% (396 people) were previously aware of their positive HIV status, while 25.3% (134 people) were newly diagnosed. Although contact investigations are still effective, the majority of contacts for people newly diagnosed were already aware of their HIV positive status. Increasing HIV testing and early diagnosis can help lower transmission rates by decreasing the number of unaware infections.
Dr. Kathleen Brady (AACO)'s annual epidemiological update. This presentation was given to the Philadelphia EMA Ryan White Planning Council on Thursday, February 20, 2014.
Special Needs for HIV+ Incarcerated PopulationsAdam Thompson
This presentation was developed for use at the Virginia Department of Corrections Academy for Staff Development. The purpose is to support clinicians and health care providers in correctional settings who provide care to Persons Living with HIV.
Nevada profile 2015 stda re'port for cdc#GOMOJO, INC.
Core practices that are moving from a pilot state to implementation at scale: Many of the
barriers facing HIV programs are common across countries. PEPFAR’s ECTs (described below in
Sections 2.3.2 and 2.3.3) identified common issues affecting countries at various levels of
epidemic control and then developed a compendium of evidence-based solutions, approaches
and case-studies that highlight successful means of addressing common barriers. Additional
evidence-based approaches and case-studies will be incorporated into this living compendium
over time. As highlighted in this PEPFAR Solutions Platform, these practices can be rapidly
adapted and scaled to move countries forward.
Key considerations for all PEPFAR programs include:
• Bringing Interventions to Scale with Fidelity: Getting to HIV epidemic control is dependent on
several factors; not the least of which is the ability to rapidly scale successful interventions with
fidelity and demonstrated impact. However, the logistics of cost- effective programmatic scale
have proven challenging, with several implementation barriers. Implementation science
defines scalability as the capacity to expand or extend an intervention to account for a growth
factor that aims to fill a gap or address unmet need in a defined population group/geographic
area.
• Data and Information Technology: The enabling environment for data and information
technology is rapidly maturing across countries, creating space, opportunity, and needed
political will to harness the Data Revolution for epidemic control. OUs should consider
innovative ways to use data and information technology to improve efficiency and
sustainability in achieving epidemic control, beyond immediate PEPFAR indicator data
collection needs. As highlighted in the Data Revolution Innovation Toolkit, available on the
PEPFAR SharePoint, OUs are encouraged to explore, adapt, and scale these and other data
driven approaches to move country epidemic control forward.
The document discusses HIV epidemiology in Saskatchewan, highlighting that the province has seen a rapid increase in new HIV cases and now has the highest rates in Canada. It summarizes Saskatchewan's 2010-2013 HIV Strategy, which aims to reduce new infections and improve quality of life for those living with HIV through improved surveillance, clinical management, prevention, and harm reduction programs. The strategy goals include earlier detection of cases, decreasing new infections and sexually transmitted infections, and increasing access to testing, care, and prevention services.
The document summarizes the key points from a quarterly review meeting of India's National AIDS Control Programme. It provides an overview of the program, highlights achievements in reducing HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths, and outlines the vision and targets to end AIDS by 2030. Key agenda items discussed establishing ART centers in all medical colleges, eliminating mother-to-child HIV transmission, implementing the HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 2017, and achieving the 90-90-90 fast track targets to diagnose and treat people living with HIV. Support was requested from states to help scale up HIV testing, treatment and care.
This document provides an organizational chart and descriptions of the STD/HIV surveillance program in Louisiana. It shows the data management and analysis units for STD and HIV data housed in different systems. It also lists contacts for HIV surveillance data and describes how prevention and counseling data are managed. Quick definitions of epidemiological terms and examples of rates and counts are provided.
Latino/Hispanic HIV/AIDS Federal Policy Recommendations: Addressing the Latin...CHAMP Network
The document discusses recommendations to address the Latino/Hispanic HIV/AIDS crisis in the US. It notes that Latinos are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS, with high rates of late testing and AIDS diagnosis. It calls for a comprehensive national HIV/AIDS strategy and heightened response from HHS that increases funding for testing, prevention, and treatment programs tailored to the Latino community. Recommendations include improving data collection, reducing stigma, developing culturally appropriate interventions, and reforming immigration policies to protect the health of people living with HIV/AIDS.
Presentation given at the International Crisis Mappers Conference 2014 was an Ignite Talk on Gender considerations in mapping the Ebola outbreak. The video for the talk can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXbGbWNIaI4
The document discusses the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Kenya. It provides statistics on the number of people living with HIV/AIDS, deaths from AIDS, and new infections in Kenya and worldwide. It then describes the significant demographic, educational, agricultural, health, industrial, social and economic impacts of the epidemic in Kenya, including increased orphan rates, declines in life expectancy, increased burden on the healthcare system, and loss of skilled workers. It notes the government of Kenya has declared AIDS a national disaster and established policies and institutions to accelerate the national response.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
This document contains data from the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention on the epidemiology of HIV infection in the United States through 2013. It includes statistics on HIV diagnoses, living cases, deaths, and AIDS classifications by sex, transmission category, race/ethnicity, age, and year. The data show trends in the HIV epidemic such as male-to-male sexual contact being the most common transmission category and blacks/African Americans having the highest rates of diagnoses and prevalence.
AIDSVu is an online mapping tool that allows users to visually explore HIV prevalence data in the United States. It provides interactive national, state, and local maps showing HIV diagnosis rates by factors like demographic group, transmission route, and medical care access. The goal is to make complex HIV data widely accessible and locally relevant to support prevention and treatment efforts. Maps of Dallas, Texas show diagnosis rates by race, age, sex and ZIP code to understand disparities and plan local responses.
Dr. Kathleen Brady of Philadelphia's AIDS Activities Coordinating Office (AACO) gave this presentation at the January 9, 2013 Comprehensive Planning Committee meeting.
Was your Sex Ed lacking? Find the missing chapter with iPROVIBE.com. "Let the Vibe be with you." -proVibe Promoting Self-Love - Sex Ed - Dating Prerequisites - Wellness http://iprovibe.com/ http://gplus.to/iprovibe http://www.facebook.com/iprovibe https://twitter.com/iproVibe http://pinterest.com/iprovibe/
This study analyzed data from 2009 on newly reported HIV cases and their sexual partners in Dallas County, Texas. Of the 530 sexual partners tested who were contacts of people newly diagnosed with HIV, 74.7% (396 people) were previously aware of their positive HIV status, while 25.3% (134 people) were newly diagnosed. Although contact investigations are still effective, the majority of contacts for people newly diagnosed were already aware of their HIV positive status. Increasing HIV testing and early diagnosis can help lower transmission rates by decreasing the number of unaware infections.
Dr. Kathleen Brady (AACO)'s annual epidemiological update. This presentation was given to the Philadelphia EMA Ryan White Planning Council on Thursday, February 20, 2014.
Special Needs for HIV+ Incarcerated PopulationsAdam Thompson
This presentation was developed for use at the Virginia Department of Corrections Academy for Staff Development. The purpose is to support clinicians and health care providers in correctional settings who provide care to Persons Living with HIV.
Nevada profile 2015 stda re'port for cdc#GOMOJO, INC.
Core practices that are moving from a pilot state to implementation at scale: Many of the
barriers facing HIV programs are common across countries. PEPFAR’s ECTs (described below in
Sections 2.3.2 and 2.3.3) identified common issues affecting countries at various levels of
epidemic control and then developed a compendium of evidence-based solutions, approaches
and case-studies that highlight successful means of addressing common barriers. Additional
evidence-based approaches and case-studies will be incorporated into this living compendium
over time. As highlighted in this PEPFAR Solutions Platform, these practices can be rapidly
adapted and scaled to move countries forward.
Key considerations for all PEPFAR programs include:
• Bringing Interventions to Scale with Fidelity: Getting to HIV epidemic control is dependent on
several factors; not the least of which is the ability to rapidly scale successful interventions with
fidelity and demonstrated impact. However, the logistics of cost- effective programmatic scale
have proven challenging, with several implementation barriers. Implementation science
defines scalability as the capacity to expand or extend an intervention to account for a growth
factor that aims to fill a gap or address unmet need in a defined population group/geographic
area.
• Data and Information Technology: The enabling environment for data and information
technology is rapidly maturing across countries, creating space, opportunity, and needed
political will to harness the Data Revolution for epidemic control. OUs should consider
innovative ways to use data and information technology to improve efficiency and
sustainability in achieving epidemic control, beyond immediate PEPFAR indicator data
collection needs. As highlighted in the Data Revolution Innovation Toolkit, available on the
PEPFAR SharePoint, OUs are encouraged to explore, adapt, and scale these and other data
driven approaches to move country epidemic control forward.
This document is the 2021 Massachusetts Integrated HIV, STD and Viral Hepatitis Surveillance Report published by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. It provides data on reported cases of HIV, STDs, viral hepatitis and other infectious diseases in Massachusetts in 2021 and previous years. The report includes statistics on reported cases by gender, age, geographic location, transmission route and other important epidemiological information. It is intended to inform public health surveillance, policymaking and clinical practice.
Evaluating the National HIV/AIDS Strategy with Surveillance DataCDC NPIN
The document discusses evaluating the National HIV/AIDS Strategy using HIV surveillance data. It outlines the Strategy's goals of reducing new infections, increasing access to care, and reducing health disparities. It then describes how HIV surveillance data can measure progress, including data on HIV diagnoses, CD4 and viral load tests, entry to and retention in care. Preliminary national data from 2006-2009 shows HIV incidence has remained relatively stable, while AIDS diagnoses and deaths have declined as the number of people living with HIV has increased.
This document discusses National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. It notes that African Americans are disproportionately affected by HIV and provides statistics on new diagnoses and prevalence among black men and women. Key facts are presented on youth HIV rates, historical HIV incidence trends by race/ethnicity in Marion County, IN, and challenges and opportunities regarding pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) medication to prevent HIV. The goal of achieving an "AIDS-Free Generation" through expanded testing, care, treatment, and prevention access is also mentioned.
The Madison County AIDS Program (MadCAP) is seeking funding to implement an HIV/AIDS risk reduction program for adolescents in Madison County high schools. The program will use the evidence-based BART (Becoming a Responsible Teen) curriculum over the 2016-2017 school year. The goal is to reduce HIV rates among teens and young adults by increasing HIV knowledge, perceived risk of infection, and safe sex practices. Freshmen students will participate in sessions on causes, transmission, testing and prevention. The program aims to have 75% of participants increase essential HIV knowledge and perceive themselves at higher risk of infection after. It will also teach proper condom use through demonstrations to further prevent spread of HIV. Evaluation will compare pre-
The document summarizes HIV engagement in care data for Philadelphia and nationally. It finds that in Philadelphia in 2009, 82% of people living with HIV were aware of their infection, 62% were linked to care, 52% were retained in care, 46% were prescribed antiretroviral therapy (ART), and 30% had viral suppression. Nationally, the rates were slightly higher. The epidemic in Philadelphia primarily affects minorities and transmission is mostly through men who have sex with men and heterosexual contact. While new AIDS cases have declined 25%, growing numbers are living with HIV. Around 20-30% have unmet needs and are not engaged in regular HIV care.
The document summarizes HIV care continuum and engagement in care data for Philadelphia. Key points:
- In 2010, 82% of those diagnosed with HIV in Philadelphia were linked to care, 54% remained in care, 49% were on antiretroviral therapy (ART), and 38% had suppressed viral loads.
- Engagement in care varies by demographic group - males, blacks, Latinos, MSM, and younger age groups have lower rates of retention, ART use, and viral suppression compared to females, whites, heterosexuals, and older adults.
- 18% of those living with HIV/AIDS in the Philadelphia area had unmet needs for primary medical care in 2012, with higher
Kathleen Brady of the PDPH presented the annual report on the HIV epidemic in Philadelphia at the February 2017 meeting of the Philadelphia Ryan White Part A Planning Council.
Similar to Illustrating HIV/AIDS in the United States (20)
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise stimulates the production of endorphins in the brain which elevate mood and reduce stress levels.
Illustrating HIV/AIDS in the United States: Black PersonsAIDSVu
AIDSVu offers a variety of tools to help illustrate the impact of HIV in the United States.Visit www.AIDSVu.org for more map views and downloadable resources.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
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2. About AIDSVu
AIDSVu is a compilation of interactive, online maps that allows
users to visually explore the HIV epidemic in the U.S. alongside
critical resources such as HIV testing and treatment center
locations.
AIDSVu’s mission is to make HIV prevalence data widely
accessible and locally relevant.
AIDSVu provides users with an intuitive, visual way to connect
with complex information about persons living with an HIV
diagnosis at national, state and local levels.
www.AIDSVu.org
3. Interactive Maps
National, State, and Local Maps
• Persons living with an HIV
diagnosis by state, county,
ZIP code and census tract
• Social determinants of health
(e.g., poverty, lack of health
insurance, educational
attainment)
• HIV transmission modes
• HIV testing and treatment center
locations
• NIH-funded HIV Prevention,
Vaccine & Treatment Trials Sites
www.AIDSVu.org
4. State Profiles
• State demographics
• HIV prevalence rate ratios by
race/ethnicity
• HIV transmission modes, late diagnoses
and mortality data
• HIV/AIDS federal grant funding and
programs
• STD quick facts
• Health department contacts and website
links for HIV/AIDS
www.AIDSVu.org
5. Other AIDSVu Features
HIV Testing Site Locator
• CDC National Prevention
Information Network
• Search by ZIP code or city & state
HIV Treatment Site Locator
• Ryan White HIV/AIDS Medical
Care Providers
• Search by ZIP code or city & state
Downloadable Resources
• Slide decks with high-resolution
maps
• Data sets
www.AIDSVu.org
6. AIDSVu: Supporting the National
HIV/AIDS Strategy
• Prevent new HIV infections
• Improve linkage to prevention, care and treatment
• Reduce HIV-related health disparities
www.AIDSVu.org
7. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis,
by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
8. Rates of Black Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
9. Rates of White Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
10. Rates of Hispanic/Latino Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
11. Rates of Black & White Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
Black Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
12. Rates of Hispanic/Latino & White Persons Living
with an HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
Hispanic/Latino Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
13. Rates of Persons Aged 13-24 Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
14. Rates of Persons Aged 25-34 Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
15. Rates of Persons Aged 35-44 Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
16. Rates of Persons Aged 45-54 Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
17. Rates of Persons Aged 55 & Older Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
18. Rates of Males Living with an HIV Diagnosis,
by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
19. Rates of Females Living with an HIV Diagnosis,
by County, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
20. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis,
by County, Southeastern U.S., 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
21. Rates of Black & White Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, Southeastern U.S., 2009
Black Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
22. Rates of Hispanic/Latino & White Persons Living with an
HIV Diagnosis, by County, Southeastern U.S., 2009
Hispanic/Latino Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
23. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis &
Poverty Rates, by County, 2009
Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis Poverty Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention. U.S. Census Bureau, Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates.
www.AIDSVu.org
24. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis &
Percent with High School Education, by County, 2009
Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis Percent with High School Education
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Notes. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting. High school education data is only inclusive of
persons aged 25 and older.
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention. U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, 2005-2009. www.AIDSVu.org
25. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis &
Median Household Income, by County, 2009
Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis Median Household Income
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention. U.S. Census Bureau, Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates.
www.AIDSVu.org
26. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis & Percent of
Population without Health Insurance, by County, 2009
Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis Population without Health Insurance
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Notes. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting. Health insurance data is only inclusive of persons
aged 65 and younger.
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention. U.S. Census Bureau, Small Area Health Insurance Estimates. www.AIDSVu.org
27. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis &
Income Inequality (Gini Coefficient), by County, 2009
Persons Living with an HIV Diagnosis Income Inequality
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention. U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, 2006-2010.
www.AIDSVu.org
28. Percent of Males Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Male-to-Male Sexual Contact,
by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
29. Percent of Males Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Male-to-Male Sexual Contact &
Injection Drug Use, by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
30. Percent of Males Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Injection Drug Use, by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
31. Percent of Males Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Heterosexual Contact, by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
32. Percent of Females Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Injection Drug Use, by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
33. Percent of Females Living with an HIV Diagnosis for whom
Infection is Attributed to Heterosexual Contact, by State, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy. ** State health department requested not to release data. *** Estimated data are not available.
Note. Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease at diagnosis, and have been statistically adjusted to
account for reporting delays and missing risk-factor information, but not for incomplete reporting.
Data Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention.
www.AIDSVu.org
34. ZIP Code and Census Tract Maps
HIV prevalence data by ZIP code for HIV prevalence data by census tract for
13 cities: two cities:
• Atlanta • Philadelphia
• Chicago • Washington, DC
• Dallas
• Detroit
• Houston
• Los Angeles
The maps on the following
• Miami
pages are just a few examples
• New Orleans
of the local interactive maps
• New York
available on AIDSVu.
• Philadelphia
• San Francisco
• San Juan, Puerto Rico
• Washington, DC
www.AIDSVu.org
35. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, Philadelphia, 2009
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in the City of Philadelphia at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of
12/31/2011.
Data Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, AIDS Activities Coordinating Office.
www.AIDSVu.org
36. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS Diagnosis,
by ZIP Code & Census Tract, Philadelphia, 2009
ZIP Code Rates Census Tract Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy because of a small number of cases and/or a small population size.
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in the City of Philadelphia at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of
12/31/2011.
Data Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, AIDS Activities Coordinating Office.
www.AIDSVu.org
37. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by Census Tract, Washington, DC, 2009
* Data are not shown to protect privacy because of a small number of cases and/or a small population size.
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in Washington, DC at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of 12/31/11.
Data Source: District of Columbia Department of Health, HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, STD and TB Administration.
www.AIDSVu.org
38. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS Diagnosis,
by ZIP Code & Census Tract, Washington, DC, 2009
ZIP Code Rates Census Tract Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy because of a small number of cases and/or a small population size.
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in Washington, DC at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of 12/31/11.
Data Source: District of Columbia Department of Health, HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, STD and TB Administration.
www.AIDSVu.org
39. Rates of Black & White Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by Census Tract, Washington, DC, 2009
Black Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy because of a small number of cases and/or a small population size.
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in Washington, DC at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of 12/31/11.
Data Source: District of Columbia Department of Health, HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, STD and TB Administration.
www.AIDSVu.org
40. Rates of Hispanic/Latino & White Persons Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by Census Tract, Washington, DC, 2009
Hispanic/Latino Rates White Rates
* Data are not shown to protect privacy because of a small number of cases and/or a small population size.
Note. Data represent persons living with an HIV or AIDS diagnosis in Washington, DC at the end of 2009 and who were reported as of 12/31/11.
Data Source: District of Columbia Department of Health, HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, STD and TB Administration.
www.AIDSVu.org
41. Caveats & Limitations of AIDSVu Maps
• Data on AIDSVu may differ from data released in state and
local HIV surveillance reports.
• Maps are inclusive of incarcerated persons and should be
interpreted with caution.
• AIDSVu maps do not reflect undiagnosed cases.
• Rates and case counts are not reported for states that
transitioned to name-based reporting after January 2007 – DC,
HI, MD, MA and VT.
• Caution should be exercised when comparing maps because
the scales change when viewing data overall and by
race/ethnicity, sex and age group breakdowns.
www.AIDSVu.org
42. Additional Resources
For maps of state-level data that include HIV and other sexually
transmitted infections (STIs), visit the CDC’s National Center for
HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention (NCHHSTP)
Atlas: www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/atlas/
For more information about HIV prevention, visit:
www.cdc.gov/hiv/strategy/hihp/ and http://aids.gov/federal-
resources/hiv-aids-programs/prevention-programs/index.html
For additional state health facts and HIV/AIDS policy fact sheets,
visit the Kaiser Family Foundation’s website:
www.kff.org/hivaids/index.cfm
www.AIDSVu.org
43. Contact AIDSVu
More map views, downloadable maps and additional resources
are available online at www.aidsvu.org.
For more information about AIDSVu, including information about
custom map views and images, please email info@aidsvu.org.
www.AIDSVu.org
44. Index
• About AIDSVu Slide 2
• AIDSVu Features Slides 3-5
• Supporting the National HIV/AIDS Strategy Slide 6
• AIDSVu National Maps Slides 7-19
• AIDSVu Southeastern U.S. Maps Slides 20-22
• AIDSVu Social Determinants of Health Maps Slides 23-27
• AIDSVu Transmission Category Maps Slides 28-33
• AIDSVu ZIP Code and Census Tract Maps Slides 34-40
• Caveats & Limitations of AIDSVu Maps Slide 41
• Additional Resources Slide 42
• Contact AIDSVu Slide 43
www.AIDSVu.org