Behavioral Surveillance


​Information is needed about risk behaviors among groups of persons at high-risk for HIV infection, trends in these behaviors over time, and exposure to and use of HIV prevention services. The three largest high-risk groups that information will be collected on are men who have sex with men (MSM), injecting drug users (IDU), and high-risk heterosexuals (HET).  The information collected can help explain trends in new HIV diagnoses and living HIV cases. These data can also be used to evaluate prevention programs and direct future HIV prevention activities.

BESURE 

HIV Behavioral Surveillance for the Baltimore-Towson metropolitan area is conducted as a collaboration between the Maryland Department of Health and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and operates as the BEhavioral SUrveillance REsearch Study or BESURE.

Click here for information on BESURE Baltimore.

Click​ here​ for information on National HIV Behavioral Surveillance (NHBS).

Local Publication List: BESURE-Publications-2026