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
ย
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.
- African American men account for 70% of new HIV/AIDS cases in Los Angeles County, though they represent only 12-14% of the population. The majority of cases are in men ages 20-49.
- Poverty, lack of health insurance, and high incarceration rates negatively impact access to healthcare for African American men with HIV/AIDS in Los Angeles. However, community organizations provide support and work to increase access.
- HIV/AIDS has disproportionate effects in the African American community in Los Angeles County. Efforts are being made to increase testing, prevention, and treatment through programs tailored for at-risk groups.
The document discusses how HIV/AIDS has disproportionately impacted African Americans in urban areas. Some key points:
- African Americans represent 13% of the US population but around half of new HIV diagnoses. Rates are much higher than for whites and Hispanics.
- Cities examined like Detroit, New York, Baltimore, and DC have large African American populations and high rates of HIV among this group.
- Factors contributing to higher rates include poverty, lack of access to healthcare and education, high-risk behaviors, and stigma preventing awareness and treatment.
- Efforts are being made through organizations, campaigns, testing and healthcare to address the epidemic in these communities.
Community Profile of HIV AIDS within Atlanta GeorgiaMary Akel
ย
This document provides a community profile of HIV/AIDS in Metro Atlanta, focusing on Fulton and Dekalb Counties. It identifies relevant geographic, demographic, and socioeconomic characteristics of the area. HIV prevalence and rates of STIs like chlamydia are significantly higher in these counties compared to national averages. African Americans and the LGBT community are disproportionately affected. The document analyzes how factors like poverty, lack of healthcare access, and stigma likely contribute to the high disease burden. It concludes that HIV/AIDS is one of the most pressing public health issues facing Metro Atlanta due to its complex risk factors.
Minorities, especially African Americans, account for nearly half the population of Fulton County, Georgia but experience disproportionate rates of health issues like sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). STD rates in Fulton County, particularly for conditions like chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis, are among the highest in the state. African Americans contract STDs at much higher rates than other groups. Social factors like poverty, lack of access to healthcare, and segregation of minority populations likely contribute to these disparities.
Illustrating HIV/AIDS in the United States: Hispanic/Latino PersonsAIDSVu
ย
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.
- African American men account for 70% of new HIV/AIDS cases in Los Angeles County, though they represent only 12-14% of the population. The majority of cases are in men ages 20-49.
- Poverty, lack of health insurance, and high incarceration rates negatively impact access to healthcare for African American men with HIV/AIDS in Los Angeles. However, community organizations provide support and work to increase access.
- HIV/AIDS has disproportionate effects in the African American community in Los Angeles County. Efforts are being made to increase testing, prevention, and treatment through programs tailored for at-risk groups.
The document discusses how HIV/AIDS has disproportionately impacted African Americans in urban areas. Some key points:
- African Americans represent 13% of the US population but around half of new HIV diagnoses. Rates are much higher than for whites and Hispanics.
- Cities examined like Detroit, New York, Baltimore, and DC have large African American populations and high rates of HIV among this group.
- Factors contributing to higher rates include poverty, lack of access to healthcare and education, high-risk behaviors, and stigma preventing awareness and treatment.
- Efforts are being made through organizations, campaigns, testing and healthcare to address the epidemic in these communities.
Community Profile of HIV AIDS within Atlanta GeorgiaMary Akel
ย
This document provides a community profile of HIV/AIDS in Metro Atlanta, focusing on Fulton and Dekalb Counties. It identifies relevant geographic, demographic, and socioeconomic characteristics of the area. HIV prevalence and rates of STIs like chlamydia are significantly higher in these counties compared to national averages. African Americans and the LGBT community are disproportionately affected. The document analyzes how factors like poverty, lack of healthcare access, and stigma likely contribute to the high disease burden. It concludes that HIV/AIDS is one of the most pressing public health issues facing Metro Atlanta due to its complex risk factors.
Minorities, especially African Americans, account for nearly half the population of Fulton County, Georgia but experience disproportionate rates of health issues like sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). STD rates in Fulton County, particularly for conditions like chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis, are among the highest in the state. African Americans contract STDs at much higher rates than other groups. Social factors like poverty, lack of access to healthcare, and segregation of minority populations likely contribute to these disparities.
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.
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 Effect Race and Income on HIV AIDS infection in African-Americans - Sunil...Sunil Nair
ย
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.
Health department announces 41% drop in deaths among black new yorkers living...maisondelamar
ย
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 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.
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 document analyzes current trends in HIV and AIDS infections in the United States based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It finds that while new diagnoses of both HIV and AIDS are declining overall, certain groups such as African Americans and Hispanics still have significantly higher rates of infection. By organizing the raw data into spreadsheets and graphs, it identifies trends like most HIV diagnoses occurring in individuals ages 20-24 and most AIDS diagnoses in those ages 35-44.
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.
Women with HIV/AIDS in New York City - A Geographic ReviewCHAMP Network
ย
The document analyzes geographic data on women with HIV/AIDS in New York City. It finds the highest numbers are in the Bronx, Harlem, Lower East Side, and Central Brooklyn. However, the highest rates are concentrated in the South and Central Bronx and parts of Harlem and Central Brooklyn. Unlike men, the highest concentration of women with HIV/AIDS falls within the highest poverty neighborhoods. Similarly, it falls within the highest incarceration rate neighborhoods. This suggests factors like poverty and incarceration may be more related to high rates in women than sexual orientation for men. The document recommends improving and tailoring HIV/AIDS services for women in these high-risk neighborhoods.
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 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 discusses barriers to HIV prevention and care for gay and bisexual African American males aged 18-24 in Sacramento County. It notes that this group has disproportionately high rates of HIV infection locally and nationally. Some key barriers include poverty, lack of health insurance, discrimination, homophobia, and lack of access to healthcare. The proposed "PrEP for Love" program aims to address this issue by providing HIV/STI education, access to pre-exposure prophylaxis medication, and linkage to culturally competent healthcare providers to reduce new HIV infections in this high-risk population. It seeks to replicate the success of a similar program in San Francisco that reported zero new HIV cases during its operation.
Running Head: COMMUNITY ANALYSIS 1
Community Analysis
The most prevalent risk factors among racial and ethnic minorities are unprotected vaginal or anal sex, inadequate sex education, improving access to prevention and care services and drug use. Jackson, MS has a population of 173,212, with median household income of $32,250. Poverty is one of the major contributing factors to the risky behaviors and the rise of HIV infections within racial/ethnic minority youths. The residents with incomes below the poverty level in Jackson, MS by 2015 was 39.9%, and those with income below 50% of the poverty level was 19.2%, the breakdown is between ages 13 to 19 years of poor residents in Jackson, MS and the percentage is below half of poverty level of 20%. The most common race or ethnicity living below the poverty line in Jackson, MS is Black or African American, followed by White and Hispanic or Latino. The state of homelessness is on the rise and many of these shelters in Jackson, MS now have waiting lists with majority of its occupants are racial/ethnic minority. Even with the waiting lists, those that need to be sheltered will have to call ahead to confirm (City Data, 2015).
Mississippi is one of the most rustic states in the United States and its population is perhaps the poorest. According to the 2010 Census, Mississippi has a population of 2,967,297 people, with a racial distribution of 59% white, 37% black, 3% Hispanic, and 2% other. Mississippi ranks second in the nation (after the District of Columbia) for the highest proportion of African Americans. Through U.S. Census Bureau 2011 American Community Surveys, Mississippi levels the first in the country for the number of people living in poverty (22.6% of the total population) and the lowest middle household revenue ($36,919) (United State Census Bureau, 2011). According to the 2011 National HIV Surveillance Report, Mississippi had the 4th highest rate of HIV infection in the United States. The stateโs capital city, Jackson, had the third highest rate of HIV diagnoses within aged 13 to 19 years and the eighth highest AIDS diagnosis by metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in 2011. For the past twenty years, numbers of peoples living with HIV in Mississippi has risen yearly. By the end of December 31, 2013, there was approximately 10,473 Mississippians living with HIV (National HIV Surveillance Report, 2013).
Secondary data
Jackson, MS the stateโs capital city and with the most new HIV disease cases are identified in the West Central Public Health District V, which includes the metropolitan Jackson Hinds area, where 47% of all persons with HIV disease in Mississippi reside presently (Mississippi State Department of Health, 2015). According to data for states and metropolitan areas, itโs shown that racial and ethnic minority youths aged between 13 to 19 years rank 4th in the diagnose of HIV at 44.7%. The education b ...
Nevada profile 2015 stda re'port for cdc#GOMOJO, INC.
ย
Core practices that are moving from a pilot state to implementation at scale: Many of the
barriers facing HIV programs are common across countries. PEPFARโs 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:
โข 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.
โข 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 discusses empowering youth regarding HIV/AIDS through open communication and education. It notes that over 50% of HIV-positive youth do not know their status. School and health officials want to better engage youth through respectful dialogue to provide information to help change behaviors and potentially save lives. While uncomfortable, adults and youth must learn to listen to each other on this important topic.
This document discusses steps to reach a vision of eliminating HIV infections and ensuring access to treatment. It notes the need to consider health disparities, upcoming healthcare reforms, and new testing strategies. Over 4,400 people in Central Texas have been diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, with most cases in Travis County but growing numbers in surrounding areas. Outreach, prevention education, testing and disease intervention are key entry points to care. Medical services then provide treatment, medication and referrals to support services through various funding sources.
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.
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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.
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 Effect Race and Income on HIV AIDS infection in African-Americans - Sunil...Sunil Nair
ย
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.
Health department announces 41% drop in deaths among black new yorkers living...maisondelamar
ย
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 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.
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 document analyzes current trends in HIV and AIDS infections in the United States based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It finds that while new diagnoses of both HIV and AIDS are declining overall, certain groups such as African Americans and Hispanics still have significantly higher rates of infection. By organizing the raw data into spreadsheets and graphs, it identifies trends like most HIV diagnoses occurring in individuals ages 20-24 and most AIDS diagnoses in those ages 35-44.
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.
Women with HIV/AIDS in New York City - A Geographic ReviewCHAMP Network
ย
The document analyzes geographic data on women with HIV/AIDS in New York City. It finds the highest numbers are in the Bronx, Harlem, Lower East Side, and Central Brooklyn. However, the highest rates are concentrated in the South and Central Bronx and parts of Harlem and Central Brooklyn. Unlike men, the highest concentration of women with HIV/AIDS falls within the highest poverty neighborhoods. Similarly, it falls within the highest incarceration rate neighborhoods. This suggests factors like poverty and incarceration may be more related to high rates in women than sexual orientation for men. The document recommends improving and tailoring HIV/AIDS services for women in these high-risk neighborhoods.
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 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 discusses barriers to HIV prevention and care for gay and bisexual African American males aged 18-24 in Sacramento County. It notes that this group has disproportionately high rates of HIV infection locally and nationally. Some key barriers include poverty, lack of health insurance, discrimination, homophobia, and lack of access to healthcare. The proposed "PrEP for Love" program aims to address this issue by providing HIV/STI education, access to pre-exposure prophylaxis medication, and linkage to culturally competent healthcare providers to reduce new HIV infections in this high-risk population. It seeks to replicate the success of a similar program in San Francisco that reported zero new HIV cases during its operation.
Running Head: COMMUNITY ANALYSIS 1
Community Analysis
The most prevalent risk factors among racial and ethnic minorities are unprotected vaginal or anal sex, inadequate sex education, improving access to prevention and care services and drug use. Jackson, MS has a population of 173,212, with median household income of $32,250. Poverty is one of the major contributing factors to the risky behaviors and the rise of HIV infections within racial/ethnic minority youths. The residents with incomes below the poverty level in Jackson, MS by 2015 was 39.9%, and those with income below 50% of the poverty level was 19.2%, the breakdown is between ages 13 to 19 years of poor residents in Jackson, MS and the percentage is below half of poverty level of 20%. The most common race or ethnicity living below the poverty line in Jackson, MS is Black or African American, followed by White and Hispanic or Latino. The state of homelessness is on the rise and many of these shelters in Jackson, MS now have waiting lists with majority of its occupants are racial/ethnic minority. Even with the waiting lists, those that need to be sheltered will have to call ahead to confirm (City Data, 2015).
Mississippi is one of the most rustic states in the United States and its population is perhaps the poorest. According to the 2010 Census, Mississippi has a population of 2,967,297 people, with a racial distribution of 59% white, 37% black, 3% Hispanic, and 2% other. Mississippi ranks second in the nation (after the District of Columbia) for the highest proportion of African Americans. Through U.S. Census Bureau 2011 American Community Surveys, Mississippi levels the first in the country for the number of people living in poverty (22.6% of the total population) and the lowest middle household revenue ($36,919) (United State Census Bureau, 2011). According to the 2011 National HIV Surveillance Report, Mississippi had the 4th highest rate of HIV infection in the United States. The stateโs capital city, Jackson, had the third highest rate of HIV diagnoses within aged 13 to 19 years and the eighth highest AIDS diagnosis by metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in 2011. For the past twenty years, numbers of peoples living with HIV in Mississippi has risen yearly. By the end of December 31, 2013, there was approximately 10,473 Mississippians living with HIV (National HIV Surveillance Report, 2013).
Secondary data
Jackson, MS the stateโs capital city and with the most new HIV disease cases are identified in the West Central Public Health District V, which includes the metropolitan Jackson Hinds area, where 47% of all persons with HIV disease in Mississippi reside presently (Mississippi State Department of Health, 2015). According to data for states and metropolitan areas, itโs shown that racial and ethnic minority youths aged between 13 to 19 years rank 4th in the diagnose of HIV at 44.7%. The education b ...
Nevada profile 2015 stda re'port for cdc#GOMOJO, INC.
ย
Core practices that are moving from a pilot state to implementation at scale: Many of the
barriers facing HIV programs are common across countries. PEPFARโs 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:
โข 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.
โข 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 discusses empowering youth regarding HIV/AIDS through open communication and education. It notes that over 50% of HIV-positive youth do not know their status. School and health officials want to better engage youth through respectful dialogue to provide information to help change behaviors and potentially save lives. While uncomfortable, adults and youth must learn to listen to each other on this important topic.
This document discusses steps to reach a vision of eliminating HIV infections and ensuring access to treatment. It notes the need to consider health disparities, upcoming healthcare reforms, and new testing strategies. Over 4,400 people in Central Texas have been diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, with most cases in Travis County but growing numbers in surrounding areas. Outreach, prevention education, testing and disease intervention are key entry points to care. Medical services then provide treatment, medication and referrals to support services through various funding sources.
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
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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.
Communicating effectively and consistently with students can help them feel at ease during their learning experience and provide the instructor with a communication trail to track the course's progress. This workshop will take you through constructing an engaging course container to facilitate effective communication.
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This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
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(๐๐๐ ๐๐๐) (๐๐๐ฌ๐ฌ๐จ๐ง ๐)-๐๐ซ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐ฆ๐ฌ
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- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
๐๐ฑ๐ฉ๐ฅ๐๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐ญ๐ฎ๐ซ๐ ๐๐ง๐ ๐๐๐จ๐ฉ๐ ๐จ๐ ๐๐ง ๐๐ง๐ญ๐ซ๐๐ฉ๐ซ๐๐ง๐๐ฎ๐ซ:
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How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
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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.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
ย
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.)
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
ย
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
ย
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analyticsโ feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
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.
AIDSVuโs 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
โข Persons living with an HIV
diagnosis by state, county,
ZIP code and census tract
โข Social determinants of health
(e.g., poverty, lack of health
insurance, educational
attainment)
โข HIV transmission modes
โข HIV testing and treatment center
locations
โข NIH-funded HIV Prevention,
Vaccine & Treatment Trials Sites
www.AIDSVu.org
4. State Profiles
โข State demographics
โข HIV prevalence rate ratios by
race/ethnicity
โข HIV transmission modes, late diagnoses
and mortality data
โข HIV/AIDS federal grant funding and
programs
โข STD quick facts
โข Health department contacts and website
links for HIV/AIDS
www.AIDSVu.org
5. Other AIDSVu Features
HIV Testing Site Locator
โข CDC National Prevention
Information Network
โข Search by ZIP code or city & state
HIV Treatment Site Locator
โข Ryan White HIV/AIDS Medical
Care Providers
โข Search by ZIP code or city & state
Downloadable Resources
โข Slide decks with high-resolution
maps
โข Data sets
www.AIDSVu.org
6. AIDSVu: Supporting the National
HIV/AIDS Strategy
โข Prevent new HIV infections
โข Improve linkage to prevention, care and treatment
โข Reduce HIV-related health disparities
www.AIDSVu.org
7. Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code
Washington, DC
2012 Update
8. Rates of Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
9. Rates of Black Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
10. Rates of White Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
11. Rates of Hispanic/Latino Persons Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
12. Rates of Asian/Pacific Islander Persons Living with an HIV
or AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
13. Rates of Black & White Persons Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
14. Rates of Hispanic/Latino & White Persons Living with an HIV
or AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
15. Rates of Persons Aged 13-24 Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
16. Rates of Persons Aged 25-44 Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
17. Rates of Persons Aged 45-59 Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
18. Rates of Persons Aged 60 & Older Living with an HIV or
AIDS Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
19. Rates of Males Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
20. Rates of Females Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by ZIP Code, 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
21. Persons Living with an HIV or AIDS
Diagnosis, by Census Tract
Washington, DC
2012 Update
22. 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
23. 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
24. Rates of Black 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
25. Rates of White 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
26. Rates of Hispanic/Latino 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
27. 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
28. 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
29. Rates of Persons Aged 13-24 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
30. Rates of Persons Aged 25-44 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
31. Rates of Persons Aged 45-59 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
32. Rates of Persons Aged 60 & Older 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
33. Rates of Males 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
34. Rates of Females 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
35. Caveats & Limitations of AIDSVu Maps
โข Data on AIDSVu may differ from data released in state and
local HIV surveillance reports.
โข Maps are inclusive of incarcerated persons and should be
interpreted with caution.
โข AIDSVu maps do not reflect undiagnosed cases.
โข 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
36. Additional Resources
For maps of state-level data that include HIV and other sexually
transmitted infections (STIs), visit the CDCโs 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 Foundationโs website:
www.kff.org/hivaids/index.cfm
www.AIDSVu.org
37. 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
38. Index
โข About AIDSVu Slide 2
โข AIDSVu Features Slides 3-5
โข Supporting the National HIV/AIDS Strategy Slide 6
โข AIDSVu Maps by ZIP Code Slide 7
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Overall Map Slide 8
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Race Slides 9-14
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Age Slides 15-18
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Sex Slides 19-20
โข AIDSVu Maps by Census Tract Slide 21
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Overall Map Slides 22-23
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Race Slides 24-28
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Age Slides 29-32
โข AIDSVu Washington, DC Maps by Sex Slides 33-34
โข Caveats & Limitations of AIDSVu Maps Slide 35
โข Additional Resources Slide 36
โข Contact AIDSVu Slide 37
www.AIDSVu.org