HIV and migrants in the EU/EEA : monitoring the implementation of the Dublin Declaration on partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia : 2024 progress report (2023 data)
In 2023, migrants accounted for almost half of new HIV diagnoses in the European Union and European Economic Area (EU/EEA) remaining a key population affected by HIV across the European region. Migrants living with HIV face numerous intersecting stigmas related to their HIV and migration status, as well as broader racial and cultural discrimination. Moreover, access to health services for undocumented migrants is not universally guaranteed in the EU/EEA, which hinders HIV prevention, testing and treatment services for this group and could contribute to HIV transmission in these communities, including post-migration acquirement of HIV. For this report, migrants are defined as 'people born abroad' (i.e. those born outside the reporting country, regardless of place of HIV acquisition or diagnosis). This categorisation encompasses a broad range of individuals, some of whom may also be included in other key populations such as men who have sex with men, people who inject drugs, or sex workers. It includes those who have migrated from within the EU/EEA as well as those who have come from outside the region and will be diverse in terms of socio-demographic and socio-economic characteristics including ethnicity, nationality, migration status, gender, income, and educational level.
| Alternative title: | ECDC monitoring |
|---|---|
| Year of publication: |
[2024]
|
| Institutions: | European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (issuing body) |
| Publisher: |
Stockholm : ECDC |
| Subject: | AIDS | Zentralasien | Central Asia | EU-Staaten | EU countries | Europa | Europe | Migranten | Migrants | Arbeitsmigranten | Migrant workers |
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