EHE
93.686
In February 2019, the Administration announced a new initiative, Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE). This initiative, which began in FY 2020, seeks to achieve the important goal of reducing new HIV infections in the United States to less than 3,000 per year by 2030. The first phase of this initiative focuses resources in 48 counties, Washington, D.C., San Juan, Puerto Rico (PR), and seven states with substantial rural HIV burden (hereafter referred to as ‘jurisdictions’) to implement effective and innovative strategies, interventions, approaches, and services to achieve the goals of the initiative.
This chart shows obligations for the program by fiscal year. All data for this chart was provided by the
administering agency and sourced from SAM.gov, USASpending.gov, and Treasury.gov.
For more information on each of these data sources, please see the
About the data page.
Among clients served during March through August 2020 by the EHE-funded providers, nearly 6,300 were new to HIV care and an additional 3,600 were re-engaged in RWHAP services. Despite the challenges presented by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), EHE recipients made significant progress towards implementing EHE activities, including developing administrative and service delivery infrastructure, engaging with community members and new partners, and delivering services to clients.
EHE-funded providers served over 19,000 new and re-engaged clients. Despite the challenges presented by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), EHE recipients continued to implement FY21 EHE activities, received technical assistance to enhance services, expanded marketing strategies to increase access to HIV care within their service area, and prioritized engaging community members. During FY2021 and FY2022, HAB conducted 47 virtual programmatic site reviews to each program. Between FY2022-2023, HAB plans to conduct and in depth comprehensive review of each award recipient
HRSA-funded EHE jurisdictions made significant progress toward implementing the EHE workplans despite the COVID-19 pandemic, and in FY 2021, HRSA EHE-funded service providers served 22,413 clients who were new to HIV care and treatment. Nearly seventy-nine percent of those clients were virally suppressed.
HRSA-funded EHE jurisdictions made significant progress toward implementing the EHE workplans, and in FY 2022, HRSA EHE-funded service providers served 22,001 clients who were new to HIV care and treatment and 19,204 clients re-engaged in care. Seventy-nine percent of those clients were virally suppressed.
Single Audit Applies (2 CFR Part 200 Subpart F):
For additional information on single audit requirements for this program, review the current Compliance Supplement.
OMB is working with the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) and agency offices of inspectors general to include links to relevant oversight reports. This section will be updated once this information is made available.