Select Page

Mozambique

The Mozambique PHIA survey, also known as INSIDA 2021, began data collection in April 2021 and ended in February 2022, providing HIV counseling and testing to measure the impact of the country’s national HIV response. Survey teams visited over 8,000 households and interviewed over 17,000 participants.

Details can be found below.

Key Findings

%

Annual HIV incidence among adults

%

HIV prevalence among adults

%

Viral load suppression among adults living with HIV*

95-95-95 among adults living with HIV
20%

Adults living with HIV who knew their HIV status

75%

Adults who were aware of their HIV status who were on ART

75%

Adults who were on ART who had viral load suppression

Related Resources

No results found.
Recent PHIA News
Eswatini Measures Strides Towards HIV Epidemic through SHIMS2, Demonstrating Epidemic Control is Possible
Eswatini Measures Strides Towards HIV Epidemic through SHIMS2, Demonstrating Epidemic Control is Possible
The Government of the Kingdom of Eswatini (GKoE) remains the country with the highest HIV prevalence in the world, with nearly 1 in 3 adults (15 years and older) living with HIV. Over the last decade, the expansion of HIV testing and increase in the number of individuals living with HIV on antiretroviral treatment has demonstrated substantial progress in the nation’s HIV response.
ICAP Research Contributes to Detailed Maps of the HIV Epidemic
ICAP Research Contributes to Detailed Maps of the HIV Epidemic
A new study co-authored by Jessica Justman, MD, Senior Technical Director at ICAP at Columbia University and Associate Professor of Medicine in Epidemiology at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health, captures the evolution and variation of the HIV epidemic over space and time in sub-Saharan Africa by using detailed provincial- and district-level maps of HIV prevalence in each country, down to the level of a small city.
Columbia University President Visits PHIA Programs in Kenya and Rwanda
Columbia University President Visits PHIA Programs in Kenya and Rwanda
Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger got a firsthand look at the impact that ICAP has been making on the HIV epidemic when he recently traveled to Kenya and Rwanda, where ICAP’s longstanding partnerships and support have helped these countries achieve significant progress.