The incidence of HIV and AIDS continues to rise steadily, though over the past three years the number of new diagnoses has begun to tail off. Homosexually acquired infection is now increasing only slowly, and heterosexually acquired infection has now become the main route of transmission.1
While the incidence of infection among women was growing faster than that among men, during the last two years the rate of new diagnoses among women has fallen off more than that among men.2
References:
- Health Protection Agency, Scottish Centre For Infection & Environmental Health, Institute of Child Health (London). Aids/HIV Quarterly Surveillance Tables No. 69: 05/4 January 2006
- All new diagnoses made at GUM clinics: 1996 – 2005. Health Protection Agency, July 2006







