Today, the Trump Administration, through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), awarded approximately $1 million in Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program grants to 10 metropolitan areas that are Part A jurisdictions to provide technical assistance to enhance efforts to end the HIV epidemic. This funding through HRSA’s HIV/AIDS Bureau supports a comprehensive system of HIV primary medical care, medication, and essential support services to more than half a million people with HIV in the United States.
“Today, on National HIV Testing Day, we are proud to be taking initial steps to support the implementation of President Trump’s strategy to end the HIV epidemic in America by 2030,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program has a long track record of success in providing HIV treatment, and the President’s plan to end the HIV epidemic involves building on that success.”
“HRSA’s Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A plays a critical role in the United States’ public heath response to ending the HIV epidemic,” said HRSA Administrator George Sigounas, MS, Ph.D. “These grants will help ensure proactive programming so the most vulnerable people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States have access to life-saving care and treatment to improve health outcomes and reduce HIV transmission.”
Under Part A of the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, 52 metropolitan areas provide core medical and support services to people with HIV. The program provides grant funding to eligible metropolitan areas (EMA) and transitional grant areas (TGA) with the highest number of people with HIV and AIDS and experiencing increases in HIV and AIDS cases and emerging care needs.
Funding under the Building Capacity for HIV Elimination in Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A Jurisdiction project will provide technical assistance to strengthen efforts to end the HIV epidemic through improvements along the HIV care continuum. Based on the awarded jurisdictions’ needs, activities under this initiative will include: community engagement, enhancing core medical and support services, infrastructure support, and information dissemination efforts. Eight of the grant recipients are also among the 48 priority counties identified as part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Plan for America initiative, as indicated by an asterisk in the table below.
“As we recognize National HIV Testing Day today, we understand there is an unprecedented opportunity to end the HIV epidemic in America,” said HRSA’s HIV/AIDS Bureau Associate Administrator Laura Cheever, M.D., Sc.M. “The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program has a track record of success. In 2017, approximately 86 percent of program clients who received HIV medical care were virally suppressed, significantly higher than the national average of 60 percent among all those with diagnosed HIV.”
For a list of all 52 fiscal year 2019 Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A award recipients, visit https://hab.hrsa.gov/awards/fy-2019-ryan-white-hivaids-program-part-a-final-awards. Below are the 10 award recipients:
Source: HHS
Beyond the Surface: Rethinking Environmental Hygiene Validation at Exchange25
June 30th 2025Environmental hygiene is about more than just shiny surfaces. At Exchange25, infection prevention experts urged the field to look deeper, rethink blame, and validate cleaning efforts across the entire care environment, not just EVS tasks.
A Controversial Reboot: New Vaccine Panel Faces Scrutiny, Support, and Sharp Divides
June 26th 2025As the newly appointed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) met for the first time under sweeping changes by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the national spotlight turned to the panel’s legitimacy, vaccine guidance, and whether science or ideology would steer public health policy in a polarized era.
Getting Down and Dirty With PPE: Presentations at HSPA by Jill Holdsworth and Katie Belski
June 26th 2025In the heart of the hospital, decontamination technicians tackle one of health care’s dirtiest—and most vital—jobs. At HSPA 2025, 6 packed workshops led by experts Jill Holdsworth and Katie Belski spotlighted the crucial, often-overlooked art of PPE removal. The message was clear: proper doffing saves lives, starting with your own.