Challenge
Despite significant reductions in HIV-AIDS since the start of the National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) in 1992, India still had one of the biggest HIV epidemics in the world. The HIV epidemic in India was characterized by concentrated epidemics among key populations (KPs). This highly diverse and heterogeneous epidemic was driven primarily by sex work, unprotected sex among men who have sex with men (MSM), and injected drug use. India’s prevention program was built around targeted interventions (TIs) and a peer-based behavioral change program. India sought to leverage the TIs to achieve UNAIDS’s 90-90-90 targets (90 percent of HIV-infected individuals diagnosed, 90 percent of those diagnosed to be on anti-retroviral therapy (ART), and 90 percent of people on ART to achieve sustained virologic suppression), and end AIDS by 2030. The peer-based approach engages targeted communities to deliver interventions using peers from the key populations. However, the program faced considerable impediments. The TIs followed an outdated model focused on stable groups with lower risk and vulnerability. This hampered efforts to reach new and hard-to-reach groups of KPs with higher risk profiles. Moreover, there was inadequate linkage with antiretroviral therapy, and treatment targets were not met.