# Analysis of HIV contact tracing in Yunnan Province: data-driven insights for optimizing HIV prevention and control strategies

**Authors:** Yuhua Shi, Yu Han, Junli Huo, Huichao Chen, Xiaojing An, Xiaomei Jin, Zhimin Yang, Nuoya Xu, Xiao Zhang, Min Chen, Manhong Jia

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1689070 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study analyzed HIV contact tracing in Yunnan Province, China, finding that recently infected individuals and specific demographic groups are more likely to benefit from tracing efforts.

## Contribution

The study provides data-driven insights into optimizing HIV prevention strategies by identifying factors influencing contact tracing effectiveness.

## Key findings

- Recently infected HIV cases identified more new infections in close contacts compared to long-term infected cases.
- Certain demographic factors, like ethnicity and education level, significantly influence contact tracing uptake and testing outcomes.
- Tailored strategies are needed to improve contact tracing efficiency and HIV prevention in diverse populations.

## Abstract

To effectively control the spread of HIV, this study evaluated contact tracing implementation among newly diagnosed individuals in Yunnan Province, China—a region heavily affected by HIV.

From January to June 2020, contact tracing targeted newly diagnosed HIV cases to identify sexual/drug-injecting partners. Factors correlated with index cases, close contacts, and positive testing outcomes were analyzed.

Among 5,695 new HIV cases, 1,612 (28.3%) received tracing counseling, revealing 2,226 close contacts. Of the 1,612 index cases, 182 were recently infected, while 1,430 had been infected long-term. Of the 2,226 close contacts, 910 underwent HIV antibody testing, with 17.8% (162/910) testing positive. Notably, 132 of these contacts were newly diagnosed with HIV, representing 14.5% of those tested. The detection rates for both positive and newly diagnosed infections were higher among contacts identified by recently infected index cases than among those identified by long-term infected index cases. A multivariate analysis showed that HIV index cases of other ethnicities (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.688, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.495–1.905), the divorced (aOR = 1.430, 95%CI: 1.237–1.654), those traced through voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) (aOR = 1.707, 95%CI: 1.077–2.705) and those exposed to commercial sex (aOR = 1.437, 95%CI: 1.257–1.642) were more likely to receive tracing counselling. Among close contacts, those who were Han Chinese (aOR = 1.231, 95% CI: 1.012~1.498), married (aOR = 1.738, 95% CI: 1.339 ~ 2.255), had a high school education or higher (aOR = 2.809, 95% CI: 1.849~4.267) or were exposed to positive spouses or regular sex partners (aOR = 2.403, 95% CI: 1.741~3.317) were more likely to undergo HIV testing. A higher positive testing rate was observed among men (aOR = 2.608, 95% CI: 1.740~3.911), ethnic minorities (aOR = 1.645, 95% CI: 1.098~2.465), individuals aged 40–49 (aOR = 2.733, 95% CI: 1.497~4.990) and individuals exposed to positive spouses or regular partners (aOR = 2.215, 95% CI: 1.411~3.477).

HIV recent infection testing is instrumental in enhancing the efficiency of contact tracing efforts. The variability in contact tracing uptake among diverse populations underscores the necessity for tailored strategies. These findings provide strong support for optimizing HIV prevention and control strategies, facilitating more precise disease management objectives.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HIV recent infection (MESH:D015658), infected (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832423/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832423