12/18/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/18/2024 15:23
World AIDS Day, established in 1988 and observed annually on December 1, is a day to commemorate the 42 million people globally who have died from AIDS-related illnesses since the start of the epidemic, and honor the more than 39 million people including 1.2 million Americans, living with HIV around the world. This year's World AIDS Day theme, Collective Action: Sustain and Accelerate HIV Progress, serves as an important reminder that we must remain steadfast in our commitment to prevent new HIV infections and provide essential services to all people living with HIV. However, despite the advancements we have made around the world and in the United States, our progress has been uneven, and challenges remain. In too many communities, limited public awareness, lack of access, and sparse partner engagement continue to create barriers to comprehensive HIV prevention and treatment.
SAMHSA's mission is to lead public health and service delivery efforts that promote mental health, prevent substance misuse, and provide treatments and supports to foster recovery while ensuring equitable access and better outcomes. SAMHSA's grant recipients work to address the syndemic of HIV, viral hepatitis, substance use disorders, and mental illness. At SAMHSA, we are committed to building on the significant progress that has been made over the last four-plus decades of the collective national HIV response and continuing to improve our programming based on ongoing evidence-based research on prevention, treatment, and implementation science, as well as pragmatic lessons learned from SAMHSA-funded grant recipients in the field.
New in 2024, SAMHSA awarded $9.6 million in grants to pilot innovative approaches to meet the behavioral health needs of people who are either are at risk for or living with HIV/AIDS. These pilots include:
In 2023, SAMHSA released its 2023 - 2026 Strategic Plan, which prioritizes integrating behavioral and physical health care, including HIV prevention, testing, and linkage to treatment into SAMHSA's behavioral health grant portfolio. The MAI-funded grant programs focus on providing prevention resources to people who are at risk for HIV, diagnosing people who do not know they have HIV, and linking people with HIV to treatment and are in alignment with the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) (PDF | 1.8 MB), reflect SAMHSA's commitments laid out in our contribution to the NHAS Federal Implementation Plan (PDF | 707 KB), and are in alignment with the goals of the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) initiative, of which SAMHSA is a proud contributing agency. SAMHSA also has contributed to the Viral Hepatits and Sexually Transmitted Infections Strategic Plans, which HHS is now in the process of revising).
Consistent with the theme of 2024's World AIDS Day SAMHSA is recommitting to sustaining and accelerating our efforts towards progress on HIV. We would also like to thank our staff, grantees, federal partners, health care providers, and the substance use and mental health community in working toward our shared goal of ending the HIV epidemic in the United States. Thank you for the work you do to save lives and improve the health of the people of America.