Категории: Эпидемиологические данные
Год выпуска: 2014
Источник: ECDC
Тип документа: Report
Язык документа: ENG
Страна: EU/EEA
Conclusions:
HIV infection is of major public health importance in the EU/EEA, with no clear signs of overall decrease.
- During the past decade (2005-2014) there have been important epidemiological changes in HIV diagnoses in the EU/EEA:
- Sex between men accounted for the majority of cases diagnosed in 2014 (42%) and is increasing
- Heterosexual cases declined, driven by a decline among those from countries with generalised HIV epidemics
- Still, 37% of HIV diagnoses in 2014 were among people originating from outside the reporting country
- HIV cases attributed to injecting drug use declined over the last decade, despite the increase in two countries due to localised outbreaks
Nearly half (47%) of persons diagnosed had a CD4 cell count of <350/mm3 at diagnosis.
Evidence-based HIV prevention interventions tailored to the local epidemiological context and targeted at those most at risk should be sustained and scaled-up.
- Programmes for men who have sex with men should be a cornerstone of HIV prevention in all EU/EEA countries
- Given the high proportion of HIV cases among migrants in many EU/EEA countries, and evidence of post-migration HIV-acquisition, migrant-sensitive prevention services are crucial
- Keeping harm reduction levels high will continue to prevent HIV among people who inject drugs
- Expansion of HIV counselling and testing will ensure early diagnosis and access to treatment; this will reduce the number of late presenters and improve treatment outcomes.