# P-272. Comparing HIV Recent Diagnoses Among Sexual Risk Strata in African Nations: Insights from the Subnational HIV Estimates in Priority Populations (SHIPP) Tool

**Authors:** Jacob R Miller, Kathryn Risher

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.493 · Open Forum Infectious Diseases · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

This study uses the SHIPP tool to analyze recent HIV diagnoses across different sexual risk groups in 13 African nations, revealing significant variations that could guide targeted public health interventions.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into how HIV transmission varies by sexual risk strata and sex in African nations using the SHIPP tool.

## Key findings

- Females with a single sexual partner had higher odds of new HIV diagnoses compared to sexually inactive females in Cameroon and Rwanda.
- Males in Malawi and Tanzania were less likely to test positive for HIV if they had non-regular partners compared to none.
- The study highlights the need for targeted interventions based on sexual risk strata and sex in high HIV-burden countries.

## Abstract

An estimated 67% of those living with HIV reside in Sub-Saharan Africa. With limited resources for public health interventions, targeting high-risk populations for preventative health interventions is crucial. The Subnational HIV Estimates in Priority Populations (SHIPP) tool was developed to assist in defining high risk populations for public health intervention design. The purpose of the present analysis was to examine HIV new diagnoses across SHIPP-defined sexual risk categories (those with no sexual partners, sexually active with a single cohabitating partner, and sexually active with non-regular partners) in 13 African nations with historically high HIV incidence.

Using Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment (PHIA) data from 95,423 individuals, logistic regression was used to compare the likelihood of testing positive for HIV within the previous year between sexual risk categories.

The odds of testing positive for HIV between sexual risk categories varied widely between nations and between sexes. In general, females sexually active with a single partner were more likely to have a new positive HIV test compared to sexually inactive females (OR 2.74 [1.48, 5.07] in Cameroon, 2.61 [1.14, 5.94] in Rwanda), though those with non-regular partners showed elevated risk in Lesotho (OR 2.84 [1.94, 4.12]). There were few nations that showed differences in HIV new diagnoses among males, though males in Malawi and Tanzania were significantly less likely to test positive if they had non-regular partners compared to none (0.52 [0.28, 0.97], 0.37 [0.15, 0.86]).

These results highlight the complex transmission dynamics that exist in high-burden nations, as well as differences in transmission dynamics between sexes. Countries with significant differences in HIV new diagnoses between sexual risk categories would benefit from targeted interventions for high-risk groups, especially for women with non-regular sexual partners. Others may benefit from broader prevention strategies or additional research to identify high-risk groups. These findings can inform resource allocation for targeted intervention planning and underscore the value of risk stratification tools in intervention planning.

All Authors: No reported disclosures

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12791659