HIV/AIDS in India: Four Decades of Change, Courage & Progress

World AIDS Day, 1 December 2025

A Beginning Shrouded in Fear (1986)

When India detected its first HIV cases among sex workers in Chennai in 1986, the country was unprepared. Public knowledge was minimal. Testing was rare. Stigma was overwhelming.

But the moment marked the start of one of the largest public health mobilisations in India’s history.

By the early 1990s, India had launched the National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) and set up NACO, laying the foundation for a long journey of surveillance, prevention, and care.¹–³


The Years of Rapid Expansion (1995–2010)

When Prevention Became a National Mission

Across the next decade, India transformed its response:

  • Targeted Interventions for sex workers, MSM, transgender persons, truckers, and people who inject drugs
  • Condom promotion and STI management in high-burden districts
  • Widespread HIV testing
  • Introduction of free ART in 2004, changing survival and dignity

Peer-reviewed studies document impressive results. Declines were seen in many sex worker groups, stabilisation among MSM in several states, and improved treatment access across the country.⁴–⁶

India’s epidemic—once feared to explode—began to turn.


The Indian HIV Story in Numbers (1986 → 2024)

Prevalence & Burden

India today has:

  • 2.4–2.6 million people living with HIV¹
  • Adult prevalence ~0.20%, among the lowest globally

Yet the absolute numbers remain high due to India’s large population.

New Infections

  • 40–45% decline in new HIV infections since 2010¹
  • greatest improvements in southern states after targeted scale-up

AIDS-Related Deaths

With wider ART access:

  • Deaths have declined sharply
  • Currently estimated at ~30,000–40,000 per year⁷⁻⁸

These are not just numbers—they reflect lives saved, families supported, and communities strengthened.


Inside the High-Risk Groups: The Heart of India’s Epidemic

India’s epidemic remains concentrated, and trends vary across groups.

People Who Inject Drugs (PWID)

  • Pooled national prevalence ~6%
  • Highest rates in northeast India⁹
  • Strong links to harm-reduction coverage

Female Sex Workers (FSW)

  • Downward trends in many states
  • Community mobilisation, condoms, and STI management played a major role⁴⁻⁶

Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM)

  • Mixed patterns
  • Some urban clusters still report ongoing high incidence¹⁰

Transgender Persons

  • Consistently higher prevalence
  • Require dedicated, stigma-free services


How India Funded the Fight: From Donor Reliance to National Ownership

NACP-I to NACP-V

India’s HIV programme evolved through country-wide planning:

NACP PhaseLandmark FeaturesFunding Notes
NACP-I (1992–1999)Surveillance, awarenessWorld Bank support (~USD 84M)³
NACP-II (1999–2006)Targeted InterventionsExternal + domestic
NACP-III (2007–2012)ART scale-upMixed funding
NACP-IV (2012–2017)Strengthening prevention↑ Domestic share
NACP-V (2021–2026)Fully Government-fundedOutlay: ₹15,471.94 crore²

Global Fund Support

The Global Fund retains a catalytic role.
For 2023–2025:

  • Allocation for HIV/TB: ~US$500 million¹¹
  • Supports supply chains, diagnostics, and innovations
  • The U.S. global HIV response — largely via PEPFAR (the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) — has historically been the largest single-country contribution to worldwide HIV funding. Because India’s HIV programme is mostly domestically funded, the effect is more muted than in many low-income countries.

2024–2025: The New Era of HIV Response in India

What’s Working

  • Better ART coverage & viral load monitoring
  • Stronger TI programmes
  • Reduced infections and improved survival
  • Greater decentralisation through State AIDS Control Societies
  • Better linkage of HIV and TB services

What Needs More Focus

  • Persistent high prevalence in some MSM, transgender and PWID networks
  • Uneven ART adherence
  • Social stigma and gender barriers
  • Wider access to PrEP
  • Strengthening services for youth and digital outreach

A Four-Decade Reflection

From fear to awareness, from silence to science, India’s HIV journey is a testament to what public health systems, communities, and governments can achieve when they work together.

But HIV is not over.

On World AIDS Day 2025, the message is simple and urgent:

“End inequalities. End AIDS. Keep the promise.”


References

  1. National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO). India HIV Estimates 2023: Technical Report. New Delhi: NACO; 2024.
  2. National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO). NACP Phase-V: Strategy Booklet 2021–2026. New Delhi: NACO; 2021.
  3. National AIDS Control Organisation. National AIDS Control Programme I: Project Reports and External Evaluations. New Delhi: NACO.
  4. Tanwar S, Rewari BB, et al. India’s HIV programme: successes and challenges. Indian J Med Res. 2016;143(6):725–728.
  5. Brahmam GN, et al. HIV risk and programmatic gaps among female sex workers in India. BMC Public Health. 2013;13:234.
  6. Saggurti N, et al. HIV trends among key populations in India: findings from IBBS. Indian J Public Health. 2018;62(3):201–209.
  7. Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). UNAIDS Data 2024. Geneva: UNAIDS; 2024.
  8. UNAIDS. Country Factsheet: India. Geneva: UNAIDS; 2024.
  9. Pachuau LN, et al. HIV among people who inject drugs in India: a systematic review. Harm Reduct J. 2022;19:21.
  10. McFall AM, et al. HIV incidence among MSM and PWID in India: cohort findings 2014–2022. J Int AIDS Soc. 2024;27:e26139.
  11. The Global Fund. India Funding Profile 2023–2025. Geneva: Global Fund; 2023.

Dr. Anita Khokhar is MD in Preventive Medicine with over two decades of teaching , research and public health experience,. She is trained in preventive oncology, Emotional Freedom Techniques and Holistic health.dranitawelness.com with the tagline “Where Prevention Meets Care,” provides resources, insights, and guidance to help individuals take charge of their health through early detection, self-care practices, emotional freedom techniques, and evidence-based preventive strategies. It is designed as a trusted space where science, education, and holistic healing come together to promote healthier, more empowered living.

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