爆发
医学
公共卫生
心理干预
传输(电信)
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)
西弗吉尼亚州
家庭医学
环境卫生
病毒学
地理
护理部
电气工程
工程类
考古
作者
R. Craig McClung,Amy Atkins,Michael E. Kilkenny,Kyle T. Bernstein,Kara Willenburg,Matthew S. Weimer,Susan Robilotto,Nivedha Panneer,Erica D. Thomasson,Elizabeth C Adkins,Sheryl B. Lyss,Shawn Balleydier,Anita Edwards,Mi Chen,Suzanne M. Wilson,Senad Handanagic,Vicki Hogan,Meg Watson,Scott Eubank,Carolyn Wright,Antoine Thompson,Elizabeth DiNenno,Robyn Neblett Fanfair,Alison Ridpath,Alexandra M. Oster,Cabell County Hiv Outbreak Response Team
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.amepre.2021.05.039
摘要
In January 2019, the West Virginia Bureau for Public Health detected increased HIV diagnoses among people who inject drugs in Cabell County. Responding to HIV clusters and outbreaks is 1 of the 4 pillars of the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. initiative and requires activities from the Diagnose, Treat, and Prevent pillars. This article describes the design and implementation of a comprehensive response, featuring interventions from all pillars.This study used West Virginia Bureau for Public Health data to identify HIV diagnoses during January 1, 2018-October 9, 2019 among (1) people who inject drugs linked to Cabell County, (2) their sex or injecting partners, or (3) others with an HIV sequence linked to Cabell County people who inject drugs. Surveillance data, including HIV-1 polymerase sequences, were analyzed to estimate the transmission rate and timing of infections using molecular clock phylogenetic analysis. Federal, state, and local partners designed and implemented a comprehensive response during January 2019-October 2019.Of 82 people identified in the outbreak, most were male (60%), were White (91%), and reported unstable housing (80%). In a large molecular cluster containing 56 of 60 (93%) available sequences, 93% of inferred transmissions occurred after January 1, 2018. HIV testing, HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis, and syringe services were rapidly expanded, leading to improved linkage to HIV care and viral suppression.Evidence of rapid transmission in this outbreak galvanized robust collaboration among federal, state, and local partners, leading to critical improvements in HIV prevention and care services. HIV outbreak response requires increased coordination and creativity to improve service delivery to people affected by rapid HIV transmission.