A girl walks as part of the First Annual National Women and Girl’s HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

In 2006, the First Annual National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day took place in the United States.1

CDC recommends routine HIV screening for adults ages 13 to 64.2

Twenty-five years have passed since the first reported AIDS case in the United States.3

RYAN WHITE CARE ACT GETS A MAKEOVER

The Ryan White CARE Act was renamed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act of 2006 on December 19, 2006.

The CARE Act was never a static program. First passed in 1990, it was reauthorized in 1996 and again in 2000. Modifications by Congress have reflected changes in the epidemic and in spending priorities, among other factors. The 2006 bill was no different and brought important changes—none more so than the continued repositioning of the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program as a health care rather than social services program.

Among the legislation’s most far-reaching changes are the following.

  • Grantees under Parts A, B, and C must use at least 75 percent of funds to provide core medical services.
  • A new method of determining funding eligibility under Part A (Title I) is added, as well as a new funding category under Part A, called Transitional Grant Areas (TGAs).
  • EMAs. Metropolitan areas with a cumulative total of more than 2,000 cases of AIDS during the most recent five-year period and a population of 500,000 or more are eligible for funding as Eligible Metropolitan Areas (EMAs). Currently 22 regions qualify as EMAs. Continued eligibility as an EMA is contingent on having 2,000 or more cases of AIDS during the most recent five years; and a cumulative total of 3,000 or more living AIDS cases as of the most recent calendar year.
  • TGAs. Cities are considered a TGA if they have at least 1,000 but not more than 1,999 cumulative AIDS cases during the most recent five years, and a population of 50,000 or more persons. Currently, 29 regions qualify as TGAs.

. . . Read more about the 2006 legislation

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