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HIV Prevention 2025 Road Map – Getting on track to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030

This new Road Map charts a way forward for country-level actions to achieve an ambitious set of HIV prevention targets by 2025. Those targets emerged from the 2021 Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS, which the United Nations General Assembly adopted in June 2021 and they are underpinned by the Global AIDS Strategy (2021–2026). The Strategy sets out the principles, approaches, priority action area and programmatic targets for the global HIV response

HIV Data Best Practices Webinar Series

The webinar series focused on best practices and strategies for effectively using HIV data for successful programmatic and systematic outcomes in state, local, territorial, and tribal (STLT) health departments. The first webinar focused on data reporting to multiple funding streams. The second webinar covered how to use surveillance data to inform HIV programs. The final webinar was an interactive and engaging session for EHE jurisdictions to discuss best practices for completing CDC-PS20-2010 activities. 

The Updated National HIV/AIDS Strategy: What's New and What's Next? A Webinar to Use the Strategy

On Thursday, December 9, HIV.gov hosted “The Updated National HIV/AIDS Strategy: What’s New and What’s Next? A Webinar on How to Use the Strategy ”, led by Harold Phillips, Director, The White House Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP). Topics included how the Strategy can be used in communities, as well as how community-based organizations and federal officials plan to use the Strategy within their own communities and departments.

National HIV/AIDS Strategy for the United States 2022-2025

This National HIV/AIDS Strategy (the Strategy), the nation’s third national HIV strategy, updates the HIV National Strategic Plan (2021). The Strategy sets forth bold targets for ending the HIV epidemic in the United States by 2030, including a 75% reduction in new HIV infections by 2025 and a 90% reduction by 2030