The cascade of continuous HIV care is a public health model that describes the steps people living with HIV take from diagnosis to achieving and maintaining viral suppression through care and treatment with ART.
The cascade allows us to assess and see where there are gaps in the HIV prevention and treatment service delivery system, and where we have come closer to achieving the global “95-95-95” targets for HIV testing, treatment and viral load suppression, in particular:
- 95% of people living with HIV know their HIV status,
- 95% of people who know their status receive HIV treatment,
- 95% of people receiving HIV treatment achieve viral suppression.

The publication was prepared by ECOM and published as part of the Regional project “Sustainability of services for key populations in the region of Eastern Europe and Central Asia” (SoS_project 2.0), implemented by a consortium of organizations led by the Alliance for Public Health in partnership with the CO “100% Life”, with financial support from the Global Fund.
The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and may not reflect the views of the consortium organizations as well as the Global Fund.
The Global Fund was not involved in agreeing and approving either the material itself or the possible conclusions from it.