Facebook
TwitterThe following slide set is available to download for presentational use:
Data on all HIV diagnoses, AIDS and deaths among people diagnosed with HIV are collected from HIV outpatient clinics, laboratories and other healthcare settings. Data relating to people living with HIV is collected from HIV outpatient clinics. Data relates to England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland, unless stated.
HIV testing, pre-exposure prophylaxis, and post-exposure prophylaxis data relates to activity at sexual health services in England only.
View the pre-release access lists for these statistics.
Previous reports, data tables and slide sets are also available for:
Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). The OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the https://code.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/">Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of Official Statistics should adhere to.
Additional information on HIV surveillance can be found in the HIV Action Plan for England monitoring and evaluation framework reports. Other HIV in the UK reports published by Public Health England (PHE) are available online.
Facebook
TwitterIn the time of epidemics, what is the status of HIV AIDS across the world, where does each country stands, is it getting any better. The data set should be helpful to explore much more about above mentioned factors.
The data set contains data on
- No. of people living with HIV AIDS
- No. of deaths due to HIV AIDS
- No. of cases among adults (19-45)
- Prevention of mother-to-child transmission estimates
- ART (Anti Retro-viral Therapy) coverage among people living with HIV estimates
- ART (Anti Retro-viral Therapy) coverage among children estimates
https://github.com/imdevskp/hiv_aids_who_unesco_data_cleaning
Photo by Anna Shvets from Pexels https://www.pexels.com/photo/red-ribbon-on-white-surface-3900425/
- COVID-19 - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/corona-virus-report
- MERS - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/mers-outbreak-dataset-20122019
- Ebola Western Africa 2014 Outbreak - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/ebola-outbreak-20142016-complete-dataset
- H1N1 | Swine Flu 2009 Pandemic Dataset - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/h1n1-swine-flu-2009-pandemic-dataset
- SARS 2003 Pandemic - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/sars-outbreak-2003-complete-dataset
- HIV AIDS - https://www.kaggle.com/imdevskp/hiv-aids-dataset
Facebook
TwitterAttribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The dataset provides a comprehensive look at HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rates, the number of people living with HIV, and annual deaths across different countries. It is based on publicly available data sources such as the CIA World Factbook, UNAIDS AIDS Info, and other global health organizations. The dataset primarily focuses on adult HIV prevalence (ages 15–49) and includes estimates from recent years (e.g., 2023–2024).
This dataset can be used for: - Epidemiological Analysis: Understanding the regional distribution of HIV/AIDS and identifying high-prevalence areas. - Predictive Modeling: Developing machine learning models to predict HIV prevalence trends or identify risk factors. - Resource Allocation: Informing policymakers about regions requiring urgent intervention or resource allocation. - Health Outcome Monitoring: Tracking progress in combating HIV/AIDS over time. - Social Determinants Research: Analyzing the relationship between socio-economic factors and HIV prevalence.
The dataset is ethically sourced from publicly available and credible platforms such as the CIA World Factbook, UNAIDS, and WHO. These organizations ensure transparency and ethical standards in data collection, protecting individual privacy while providing aggregate statistics for research purposes.
This dataset serves as a valuable tool for researchers, policymakers, and public health professionals in addressing the global challenge of HIV/AIDS.
Facebook
TwitterThis shapefile provides HIV statistics by state that can be used in conjunction with the co-morbidities risk profile to provide more nuance on levels of risk by state. Note that values of 0 mean there is no data for that particular state.The source of data for HIV prevalence rates is the Nigeria Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), HIV Prevalence Geospatial Estimates 2000-2017.
Facebook
TwitterThis data set includes tables on persons living with HIV/AIDS, newly diagnosed HIV cases and all cause deaths in HIV/AIDS cases by gender, age, race/ethnicity and transmission category.
In all tables, cases are reported as of December 31 of the given year, as reported by December 31, 2024, to allow a minimum of 12 months reporting delay.
Gender is determined by both current gender and sex at birth variables; transgender values are assigned when current gender is identified as "Transgender" or when a discrepancy is identified between a person's sex at birth and their current gender (e.g., cases where sex at birth is "Male" and current gender is "Female" will become Transgender: Male to Female.) Prior to 2003, Asian and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders were classified as one combined group. In order to present these race/ethnicities separately, living cases recorded under this combined classification were split and redistributed according to their expected proportional population representation estimated from post-2003 data.
Facebook
TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
People aged 15 to 59 years seen at HIV services in the UK, expressed as a rate per 1,000 population.Data is presented by area of residence, and exclude people diagnosed with HIV in England who are resident in Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland or abroad.RationaleThe geographical distribution of people seen for HIV care and treatment is not uniform across or within regions in England. Knowledge of local diagnosed HIV prevalence and identification of local risk groups can be used to help direct resources for HIV prevention and treatment.In 2008, http://www.bhiva.org/HIV-testing-guidelines.aspx recommended that Local Authority and NHS bodies consider implementing routine HIV testing for all general medical admissions as well as new registrants in primary care where the diagnosed HIV prevalence exceeds 2 in 1,000 population aged 15 to 59 years.In 2017, guidelines were updated by https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/NG60 which is co-badged with Public Health England. This guidance continues to define high HIV prevalence local authorities as those with a diagnosed HIV prevalence of between 2 and 5 per 1,000 and extremely high prevalence local authorities as those with a diagnosed HIV prevalence of 5 or more per 1,000 people aged 15 to 59 years.When this is applied to national late HIV diagnosis data, it shows that two-thirds of late HIV diagnoses occur in high-prevalence and extremely-high-prevalence local authorities. This means that if this recommendation is successfully applied in high and extremely-high-prevalence areas, it could potentially affect two-thirds of late diagnoses nationally.Local authorities should find out their diagnosed prevalence published in UKHSA's http://fingertips.phe.org.uk/profile/sexualhealth , as well as that of surrounding areas and adapt their strategy for HIV testing using the national guidelines.Commissioners can use these data to plan and ensure access to comprehensive and specialist local HIV care and treatment for HIV diagnosed individuals according to the http://www.medfash.org.uk/uploads/files/p17abl6hvc4p71ovpkr81ugsh60v.pdf and http://www.bhiva.org/monitoring-guidelines.aspx .Definition of numeratorThe number of people (aged 15 to 59 years) living with a diagnosed HIV infection and accessing HIV care at an NHS service in the UK and who are resident in England.Definition of denominatorResident population aged 15 to 59.The denominators for 2011 to 2023 are taken from the respective 2011 to 2023 Office for National Statistics (ONS) revised population estimates from the 2021 Census.Further details on the ONS census are available from the https://www.ons.gov.uk/census .CaveatsData is presented by geographical area of residence. Where data on residence were unavailable, residence have been assigned to the local health area of care.Every effort is made to ensure accuracy and completeness of the data, including web-based reporting with integrated checks on data quality. The overall data quality is high as the dataset is used for commissioning purposes and for the national allocation of funding. However, responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of data lies with the reporting service.Data is as reported but rely on ‘record linkage’ to integrate data and ‘de-duplication’ to prevent double counting of the same individual. The data may not be representative in areas where residence information is not known for a significant proportion of people accessing HIV care.Data supplied for previous years are updated on an annual basis due to clinic or laboratory resubmissions and improvements to data cleaning. Data may therefore differ from previous publications.Values are benchmarked against set thresholds and categorised into the following groups: <2 (low), 2 to 5 (high) and≥5 (extremely high). These have been determined by developments in national testing guidelines.The data reported in 2020 and 2021 is impacted by the reconfiguration of sexual health services during the national response to COVID-19.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.worldbank.org/en/about/legal/terms-of-use-for-datasetshttps://www.worldbank.org/en/about/legal/terms-of-use-for-datasets
Source: The World Bank Last Updated: 10/26/2023 Database: World Development Indicators Series: Prevalence of HIV, total (% of population ages 15-49) Adults (ages 15+) and children (ages 0-14) newly infected with HIV Adults (ages 15-49) newly infected with HIV Antiretroviral therapy coverage (% of people living with HIV) Antiretroviral therapy coverage for PMTCT (% of pregnant women living with HIV) Children (0-14) living with HIV Children (ages 0-14) newly infected with HIV Incidence of HIV, ages 15-24 (per 1,000 uninfected population ages 15-24) Incidence of HIV, ages 15-49 (per 1,000 uninfected population ages 15-49) Incidence of HIV, all (per 1,000 uninfected population) Prevalence of HIV, female (% ages 15-24) Prevalence of HIV, male (% ages 15-24) Women's share of population ages 15+ living with HIV (%) Young people (ages 15-24) newly infected with HIV
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Statistics relating to HIV infection
Facebook
Twitterhttps://data.gov.sg/open-data-licencehttps://data.gov.sg/open-data-licence
Dataset from Singapore Department of Statistics. For more information, visit https://data.gov.sg/datasets/d_250a8096f848835cb4a835d31fcd8ffd/view
Facebook
TwitterHIV/AIDS yearly statistics in Hong Kong 1984 - 2023
Facebook
TwitterMuch of the information on national HIV prevalence in Tanzania derives from surveillance of HIV in special populations, such as women attending antenatal clinics and blood donors. For example, Mainland Tanzania currently maintains a network of 134 antenatal care (ANC) sites from which HIV prevalence estimates are generated. However, these surveillance data do not provide an estimate of the HIV prevalence among the general population. HIV prevalence is higher among individuals who are employed (6 percent) than among those who are not employed (3 percent) and is higher in urban areas than in rural areas (7percent and 4 percent, respectively). In Mainland Tanzania, HIV prevalence is markedly higher than in Zanzibar (5 percent versus 1 percent). Differentials by region are large. Among regions on the Mainland,Njombe has the highest prevalence estimate (15 percent), followed by Iringa and Mbeya (9 percent each);Manyara and Tanga have the lowest prevalence (2 percent). Among the five regions that comprise Zanzibar, all have HIV prevalence estimates at 1 percent or below. Consistent with the overall national estimate among men and women, HIV prevalence is higher among women than men in nearly all regions of Tanzania.
Facebook
TwitterHIV/AIDS data from the HIV Surveillance Annual Report Data reported to the HIV Epidemiology Program by March 31, 2022. All data shown are for people ages 18 and older. Borough-wide and citywide totals may include cases assigned to a borough with an unknown UHF or assigned to NYC with an unknown borough, respectively. Therefore, UHF totals may not sum to borough totals and borough totals may not sum to citywide totals.""
Facebook
TwitterAttribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Dataset refers to the Statistics Relating to Notification of HIV Aids Cases and Deaths in Mauritius for the year 2000 to 2023
Facebook
Twitterhttp://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/
https://data.gov.hk/en-data/dataset/hk-dh-dh_spp-dh-spp-hiv-aids-1984-to-2022-yearly-figures This dataset can be sourced from the data.gov.hk website, which was provided to them by the department of health. The category of the dataset is Health and it is in a csv file format. It was last updated on 09/01/2024. Desciption: HIV/AIDS yearly statistics in Hong Kong 1984 - 2022.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This dataset provides detailed insights into the prevalence of HIV/AIDS among adults (ages 15–49) across various countries and regions. The data is primarily sourced from the CIA World Factbook and the UNAIDS AIDSinfo platform and reflects the most recent available estimates as of 2022–2024.
What’s Included:
Country/Region – The name of each nation or area.
Adult Prevalence of HIV/AIDS (%) – The percentage of adults estimated to be living with HIV.
Number of People with HIV/AIDS – Estimated count of people infected in each country.
Annual Deaths from HIV/AIDS – Estimated number of HIV/AIDS-related deaths per year.
Year of Estimate – The year the data was reported or estimated.
Key Highlights:
Global Prevalence: Around 0.7% of the global population was living with HIV in 2022, affecting nearly 39 million people.
Hotspots: The epidemic is most severe in Southern Africa, with countries like Eswatini, Botswana, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe reporting adult prevalence rates above 20%.
High Burden Countries:
South Africa: 17.3% prevalence, approximately 9.2 million infected
Tanzania: approximately 7.49 million
Mozambique: approximately 2.48 million
Nigeria: approximately 2.45 million (1.3% prevalence)
Notes:
Data may vary in accuracy and is subject to ongoing updates and verification.
Some entries include a dash ("-") where data was not published or available.
Countries with over 1% adult prevalence are categorized under Generalized HIV Epidemics (GHEs) by UNAIDS.
Facebook
TwitterIn 2021, 1.9 million people in Nigeria were living with HIV. Women were the most affected group, counting 1.1 thousand individuals. Also, children up to age 14 who were HIV positive equaled 170 thousand.
Facebook
TwitterThis file includes HIV estimates for all 29 health districts and the 4 cities for March and December 2023 and September 2024. Estimates include: total population, people living with HIV (PLHIV), HIV prevalence, incidence, new infections, ART coverage, PLHIV who are aware / unaware of their status, HIV cascade estimates for antenatal women. All estimates can be disaggregated by age and sex. Note that these estimates are updated every year, and comparison of previous and current estimates should always be done from within the same annual Naomi file but not compared with previous year’s Naomi estimates. The Naomi model is the official tool used by UNAIDS, PEPFAR and all other countries in the region to generate sub-national HIV estimates for planning, tracking progress, and setting targets. To access and view the 2025 sub-national HIV estimates produced by the Naomi model: Download the "Malawi_2025_district_HIV_estimates_Naomi_model" digest file from our website and save it on your hard-drive. Open the HIV sub-national estimates web-viewer (http://naomi-spectrum.unaids.org/) in your browser Upload the downloaded digest file from your hard-drive to the web-viewer by clicking on the button in the top left corner of the viewer window (“Read naomi_spectrum_digest file”). With a slow internet connection, you may have to confirm that you want to “wait” a few times if your browser shows that the webpage is unresponsive.
Facebook
TwitterThis is historical data. The update frequency has been set to "Static Data" and is here for historic value. Updated on 8/14/2024 HIV Incidence Rate - This indicator shows the rate of adult/adolescent cases (age 13+) diagnosed with HIV (per 100,000 population). HIV is a significant and preventable public health problem. An estimated 16% of people with HIV in Maryland are undiagnosed. We have the knowledge and tools needed to slow the spread of HIV infection and improve the health of people living with HIV. Link to Data Details
Facebook
TwitterContents
HIV/AIDS** data from the HIV Surveillance Annual Report * Note: Data reported to the HIV Epidemiology and Field Services Program by June 30, 2016. All data shown are for people ages 13 and older. Borough-wide and citywide totals may include cases assigned to a borough with an unknown UHF or assigned to NYC with an unknown borough, respectively. Therefore, UHF totals may not sum to borough totals and borough totals may not sum to citywide totals."
Dataset has 18 features including:
Year, Borough, UHF, Gender, Age, Race, HIV diagnoses, HIV diagnosis rate, Concurrent diagnoses, % linked to care within 3 months, AIDS diagnoses, AIDS diagnosis rate, PLWDHI prevalence, % viral suppression, Deaths, Death rate, HIV-related death rate, Non-HIV-related death rate
Facebook
TwitterData Dictionary JANUARY, 2020 Gender Inequality & HIV/AIDS
Country The country the data corresponds to.The data is a subset of UNICEF’s ‘Key HIV epidemiology indicators for children and adolescents aged 10-19, 1990-2019.’This UNICEF data is sourced from UNAIDS 2020 estimates, which provide ‘modeled estimates using the best available epidemiological and programmatic data to track the HIV epidemic’. Modeled estimates are used because counting the true numbers would require regularly testing entire populations for HIV, and investigating all deaths, which is ‘logistically impossible and ethically problematic.’ For more information on the methodology behind these estimates, see the full UNAIDS 2020 report.
UNICEF Region The region the country belongs to - this dataset includes countries from Eastern & Southern Africa, and West & Central Africa.
Year The year the estimates corresponds to.
Sex Whether the estimates refer to men or women.
Age The age group that the estimates refer to - this dataset contains only estimates for adolescent women and men between the ages of 10-19.
Estimated incidence rate of new HIV infection per 1000 uninfected population The estimated number of new HIV infections, for every 1000 uninfected people in the relevant group. Note - some fields were displayed as ‘<0.01’ in the original data, however these have been rounded up to 0.01 in order to make the field numeric.
Estimated number of annual AIDS related deaths The estimated number of annual AIDS related deaths in the relevant group, to the nearest 100. Note - in the original data, values below 500 were split into the following groups; <500, <200, and <100. To make the field numeric, these have been rounded to 500, 200, and 100 respectively.
Estimated number of annual new HIV infections The estimated number of new annual HIV infections in the relevant group. Note - in the original data, values below 500 were split into the following groups; <500, <200, and <100. To make the field numeric, these have been rounded to 500, 200, and 100 respectively.
The estimated number of people living with HIV in the relevant group. Note - in the original data, values below 500 were split into the following groups; <500, <200, and <100. To make the field numeric, these have been rounded to 500, 200, and 100 respectively.
Estimated rate of annual AIDS related deaths per 100,000 population The estimated number of annual AIDS related deaths, for every 100,000 people in the relevant group. Note - some fields were displayed as ‘<0.01’ in the original data, however these have been rounded up to 0.01 in order to make the field numeric.
Data Source: UNICEF ‘Key HIV epidemiology indicators for children and adolescents aged 10-19, 1990-2019
Facebook
TwitterThe following slide set is available to download for presentational use:
Data on all HIV diagnoses, AIDS and deaths among people diagnosed with HIV are collected from HIV outpatient clinics, laboratories and other healthcare settings. Data relating to people living with HIV is collected from HIV outpatient clinics. Data relates to England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland, unless stated.
HIV testing, pre-exposure prophylaxis, and post-exposure prophylaxis data relates to activity at sexual health services in England only.
View the pre-release access lists for these statistics.
Previous reports, data tables and slide sets are also available for:
Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). The OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the https://code.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/">Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of Official Statistics should adhere to.
Additional information on HIV surveillance can be found in the HIV Action Plan for England monitoring and evaluation framework reports. Other HIV in the UK reports published by Public Health England (PHE) are available online.