HIV Testing Outcomes Among Blacks or African Americans — 50 Local U.S. Jurisdictions Accounting for the Majority of New HIV Diagnoses and Seven States with Disproportionate Occurrences of HIV in Rural Areas, 2017

Identifying persons with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection who are unaware of their status and linking them to care are critical steps in achieving viral suppression and reducing the risk for transmitting HIV (1). In 2017, 43% of new diagnoses of HIV infection were among persons who self-identify as blacks or African Americans (blacks) (2), who represent 13% of the U.S. population (3). Fewer blacks, compared with whites, were linked to HIV medical care within 90 days of diagnosis, retained in care, or virally suppressed (4). Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) is an initiative intended to reduce new HIV infections by 90% from 2020 to 2030 (5). EHE's Phase 1 is focused on 50 jurisdictions* that accounted for >50% of new diagnoses during 2016-2017 and seven states† with disproportionate HIV prevalence in rural areas (5). The purpose of this analysis was to examine HIV testing outcomes among blacks in high prevalence EHE jurisdictions, using CDC's 2017 National HIV Prevention Program Monitoring and Evaluation data. Blacks accounted for 43.2% of CDC-funded tests and 49.1% of new diagnoses of HIV infection. Seventy-nine percent of blacks with newly diagnosed HIV infection were linked to HIV medical care within 90 days (below the 2010 National HIV/AIDS Strategy goal of 85%), 71.4% interviewed for partner services, and 81.8% referred to prevention services. To achieve the goals of EHE, HIV prevention programs should focus on locally tailored evidence-based§ testing strategies to enhance and overcome barriers for linkage to and retention in care and reduce onward HIV transmission and HIV-related disparities.

Identifying persons with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection who are unaware of their status and linking them to care are critical steps in achieving viral suppression and reducing the risk for transmitting HIV (1). In 2017, 43% of new diagnoses of HIV infection were among persons who self-identify as blacks or African Americans (blacks) (2), who represent 13% of the U.S. population (3). Fewer blacks, compared with whites, were linked to HIV medical care within 90 days of diagnosis, retained in care, or virally suppressed (4). Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) is an initiative intended to reduce new HIV infections by 90% from 2020 to 2030 (5). EHE's Phase 1 is focused on 50 jurisdictions* that accounted * https://www.hiv.gov/federal-response/ending-the-hiv-epidemic/overview. for >50% of new diagnoses during 2016-2017 and seven states † with disproportionate HIV prevalence in rural areas (5). The purpose of this analysis was to examine HIV testing outcomes among blacks in high prevalence EHE jurisdictions, using CDC's 2017 National HIV Prevention Program Monitoring and Evaluation data. Blacks accounted for 43.2% of CDC-funded tests and 49.1% of new diagnoses of HIV infection. Seventy-nine percent of blacks with newly diagnosed HIV infection were linked to HIV medical care within 90 days (below the 2010 National HIV/AIDS Strategy goal of 85%), 71.4% interviewed for partner services, and 81.8% referred to prevention services. To achieve the goals of EHE, HIV prevention programs should focus on locally tailored evidence-based § testing strategies to enhance and overcome barriers for linkage to and retention in care and reduce onward HIV transmission and HIV-related disparities.
CDC analyzed 2017 HIV testing, linkage to care, and partner services data submitted to the National HIV Prevention Program Monitoring and Evaluation system by 61 CDCfunded health departments ¶  ). The percentage of blacks with newly diagnosed HIV infection (0.5%) was equal to that of Hispanics/Latinos (0.5%) and nearly twice that of whites (0.3%) and Asians (0.3%).
In 2017 CDC-funded testing programs identified 11,427 persons with a previous diagnosis of HIV infection who were not known to be in care, 8,917 (78.0%) of whom were in Phase-1 jurisdictions. Persons with a previous diagnosis who were not known to be in care were predominately aged 20-29 years (30.2%) or 30-39 years (27.7%), male (78.1%), black (58.5%), and residents of the South Census region (62.0%). The number of blacks in Phase-1 jurisdictions with a previous diagnosis and not known to be in care (5,214; 58.5%) was more than three times that of whites (1,516; 17.0%) and Hispanics/Latinos (1,359; 15.2%).
Among the 844,819 blacks tested in Phase-1 jurisdictions in 2017, 37.7% (318,835) were persons aged 20-29 years; 49.7% were males; and 63.2% were persons residing in the South ( Table 2). Of the 4,007 blacks who received a new diagnosis of HIV infection, the percentage positivity was highest among persons aged 20-29 years (0.6%), males (0.7%), and persons residing in the West Census region (0.7%). Among blacks who received a new diagnosis, 79.2% were linked to care within 90 days, 71.4% were interviewed for partner services, and 81.8% were referred to HIV prevention services. By region, linkage of blacks with newly diagnosed HIV infection to medical care within 90 days was lowest in the West (71.7%), whereas the lowest percentages of partner services interviews (58.9%) and referrals to HIV prevention services (70.2%) were in the Midwest. By subpopulation, the highest percentage of tests conducted in EHE jurisdictions were among MSM (27.4%) ( Table 1), who also had the highest rates of HIV-positive test results (3.3%) among subpopulation blacks ( Table 2).
Black MSM accounted for 15.0% (31,508 of 209,843) of tests and 64.9% (1,030 of 1,587) of new HIV diagnoses in non-health care settings. More than 70% of black MSM with newly diagnosed HIV infection were linked to HIV medical care (80.6%), interviewed for partner services (71.3%), or referred to HIV prevention services (84.2%) ( Table 2).

Discussion
The goal of HIV testing programs is to identify persons with HIV infection who are unaware of their status and to link all persons with HIV-positive test results to services. In 2017, 62.9% of CDC-funded tests and 68.9% of new diagnoses of HIV infection were in Phase-1 jurisdictions, among whom blacks accounted for >40% of tests (40.4%) and new diagnoses (47.5%). Blacks also accounted for 58.5% of persons with a previous diagnosis not known to be in care. Compared with whites, a higher percentage of blacks in Phase-1 jurisdictions received a new diagnosis (49.1%) or had previously received a diagnosis and were not known to be in care (58.5%).
This analysis found that HIV testing services supported by CDC funding are an important resource for identifying persons with new and previously diagnosed HIV infection who are not in care, especially in Phase-1 jurisdictions. Testing sites in Phase-1 jurisdictions are especially critical for blacks, who account for the largest numbers of persons tested, new diagnoses of HIV infection, and persons previously diagnosed not known to be in care. Factors such as stigma, comorbidities, and socioeconomic inequalities might increase blacks' risk for acquiring or transmitting HIV and limit access to quality health care, housing, and HIV prevention messaging (3). Delayed entry into HIV prevention and treatment, especially among blacks, leads to worse HIV care outcomes (e.g., delayed linkage to care and viral suppression) (6). Although 79.2% of blacks with newly diagnosed HIV infection in Phase-1 jurisdictions were linked to HIV medical care within 90 days, this percentage was below the 2010 National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) goal of 85% (7). This outcome suggests that the 2020 NHAS goals of 85% linkage within 30 days of diagnosis (7) and the EHE initiative to reduce new HIV infections by 90% by 2030 (7) might be challenging to achieve among blacks

TABLE 2. Linkage to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) medical care for blacks or African Americans (blacks) with newly diagnosed HIV infection -CDC-funded Phase-I Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) jurisdictions,* United States, 2017
Characteristic † For age, the numbers of records missing or invalid are as follows: in the column "CDC-funded tests among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 3,714 (0.4%); in the column "New HIV diagnoses among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 12 (0.3%); in the column "Linked to HIV medical care within 90 days of diagnoses, " 2 (0.1%); in the column "Interviewed for partner services, " 1 (0.05%); in the column "Referred to HIV prevention services, " 2 (0.1%). § For gender, the numbers of records reported as transgender, missing, or invalid are as follows: in the column "CDC-funded tests among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 4870 (0.6%); in the column "New HIV diagnoses among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 98 (2.4%); in the column "Linked to HIV medical care within 90 days of diagnoses, " 68 (2.6%); in the column "Interviewed for partner services, " 52 (2.5%); in the column "Referred to HIV prevention services, " 70 (2.6%). ¶ Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont; Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin; South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia; West: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. ** MSM include males who reported male-to-male sexual contact as well as males who reported both male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use in the past 12 months. Persons who inject drugs include persons who reported injection drug use in the past 12 months. Heterosexual males include males who only reported heterosexual contact with a female in the past 12 months. Heterosexual females include females who only reported heterosexual contact with a male in the past 12 months. Data on behavioral risk factors used to define the subpopulation were limited to those tested in non-health care settings. For subpopulation in nonhealth care settings, the numbers of records missing or invalid are as follows: in the column "CDC-funded tests among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 52,396 (25.0%); in the column "New HIV diagnoses among blacks in EHE jurisdictions, " 104 (6.6%); in the column "Linked to HIV medical care within 90 Days of diagnoses, " 47 (4.8%); in the column "Interviewed for partner services, " 39 (5.2%); in the column "Referred to HIV prevention services, " 60 (5.3%). without expanding current efforts and implementing novel testing strategies. The findings in this report are subject to at least four limitations. First, the findings are based on data from CDC-funded tests, which are not representative of all U.S. HIV testing. Second, estimates of persons with newly diagnosed HIV infection rely on verification using CDC's HIV surveillance data or self-report, which could result in an overestimation of new diagnoses. Third, data on linkage to HIV medical care, interview for partner services, and referral to HIV prevention services exclude missing data from the denominator and likely overestimate the percentage of persons receiving services. Finally, data on subpopulations are collected for all tests in non-health care settings but only for HIV-positive tests in health care settings, resulting in underreporting of tests among subpopulations.

Summary
What is already known about this topic?
Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) jurisdictions are disproportionately affected by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
What is added by this report?
In 2017, blacks accounted for >40% of those tested and new diagnoses in EHE jurisdictions. Compared with whites, more blacks in EHE jurisdictions received a new diagnosis or were identified as a person with previously diagnosed HIV infection.
What are the implications for public health practice?
HIV prevention programs focused on locally tailored innovative testing, linkage, reengagement, and prophylaxis and treatment for blacks could help to achieve the national goals to end the HIV epidemic in the United States.
CDC-funded HIV testing programs are identifying new and previously diagnosed HIV infections in persons not known to be in care in Phase-1 jurisdictions, but challenges linking persons with new and previously diagnosed infections to care differ (8). Broader implementation of routine HIV screening and HIV-related services, most notably among black MSM, has critical public health implications. To achieve the goals of the EHE initiative, HIV prevention programs will need to focus on locally tailored evidence-based testing strategies to overcome barriers for and enhance linkage to and retention in care, provide prophylaxis and treatment, and reduce onward HIV transmission and HIV-related disparities.