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Tracking the HIV epidemic: current issues, future challenges
- Source :
- American Journal of Public Health. 90:1037-1041
- Publication Year :
- 2000
- Publisher :
- American Public Health Association, 2000.
-
Abstract
- The emergence of a new infectious disease, AIDS, in the early 1980s resulted in the development of a national AIDS surveillance system. AIDS surveillance data provided an understanding of transmission risks and characterized communities affected by the epidemic. Later, these data provided the basis for allocating resources for prevention and treatment programs. New treatments have dramatically improved survival. Resulting declines in AIDS incidence and deaths offer hope that HIV disease can be successfully managed. However, to prevent and control HIV/AIDS in the coming decades, the public health community must address new challenges. These include the defining of the role of treatment in reducing infectiousness; the potential for an epidemic of treatment-resistant HIV; side effects of treatment; complacency that leads to relapses to high-risk behaviors; and inadequate surveillance and research capacity at state and local levels to guide the development of health interventions. Meeting these challenges will require reinvesting in the public health capacity of state and local health departments, restructuring HIV/AIDS surveillance programs to collect the data needed to guide the response to the epidemic, and providing timely answers to emerging epidemiologic questions.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
Restructuring
Psychological intervention
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
HIV Infections
medicine.disease_cause
Disease Outbreaks
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Environmental health
Epidemiology
medicine
Humans
Aged
business.industry
Incidence
Public health
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
United States
Infectious disease (medical specialty)
Population Surveillance
Immunology
Female
business
Developed country
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15410048 and 00900036
- Volume :
- 90
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Public Health
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....99b9c5431154ccf499992d7b4a8cd588
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.90.7.1037