Data Note: A Brief Look at Americans' Perceptions of the Global Health HIV/AIDS Epidemic
This
Data Note, using data from a national survey of Americans on HIV/AIDS
released in June 2011, examines trends in the public's perception of
HIV/AIDS as a global problem. Overall, survey trends show that Americans
view HIV/AIDS as a more pressing health problem
for the world than for the U.S., although the perceived sense of
urgency has been on the decline for both the global and domestic
epidemics. The sense of urgency about the global HIV/AIDS epidemic has
declined steeply in the past five years; about one third
of Americans ranked it as the world's most urgent health issue from
2000 through 2006, a share that fell to 21 percent in 2009 and 13
percent today.
The survey report, released in the 30th year of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and topline are also available.
Data Note (.pdf)