Women's share of population ages 15+ living with HIV (%) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Prevalence of HIV is the percentage of people who are infected with HIV. Female rate is as a percentage of the total population ages 15+ who are living with HIV.

Source: UNAIDS estimates.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Dem. Rep. Congo 71.30 2020
2 Congo 69.70 2020
3 Gabon 69.60 2020
4 Ghana 67.90 2020
5 Cameroon 67.60 2020
6 Côte d'Ivoire 65.80 2020
7 Guinea 65.60 2020
8 Angola 65.10 2020
9 Benin 65.00 2020
10 Guinea-Bissau 64.90 2020
11 Togo 64.50 2020
12 South Africa 64.40 2020
13 Kenya 64.30 2020
13 Malawi 64.30 2020
15 Namibia 64.10 2020
16 Mozambique 63.30 2020
17 Liberia 62.80 2020
18 Tanzania 62.70 2020
19 Ethiopia 62.60 2020
20 Uganda 62.50 2020
21 Eswatini 62.30 2020
22 Chad 62.00 2020
22 Rwanda 62.00 2020
24 The Gambia 61.90 2020
25 Sierra Leone 61.80 2020
25 Zambia 61.80 2020
27 Central African Republic 61.70 2020
28 Mali 61.50 2020
29 Lesotho 61.20 2020
30 Zimbabwe 60.40 2020
31 Burundi 60.20 2020
32 Burkina Faso 60.00 2020
32 Eritrea 60.00 2020
34 Nigeria 59.70 2020
34 Senegal 59.70 2020
36 Niger 58.70 2020
36 Botswana 58.70 2020
38 Djibouti 56.50 2020
39 Comoros 56.20 2020
40 Equatorial Guinea 54.90 2020
41 São Tomé and Principe 52.80 2020
42 Somalia 51.00 2020
43 Cabo Verde 50.10 2020
44 Sudan 47.80 2020
45 Mauritania 47.00 2020
46 Madagascar 46.80 2020
47 Algeria 45.60 2020
48 Morocco 44.10 2020
49 Tunisia 38.50 2020
50 Mauritius 30.70 2020
51 Libya 29.70 2020
52 Egypt 21.40 2020

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Limitations and Exceptions: The limited availability of data on health status is a major constraint in assessing the health situation in developing countries. Surveillance data are lacking for many major public health concerns. Estimates of prevalence and incidence are available for some diseases but are often unreliable and incomplete. National health authorities differ widely in capacity and willingness to collect or report information.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: HIV prevalence rates reflect the rate of HIV infection in each country's population. Low national prevalence rates can be misleading, however. They often disguise epidemics that are initially concentrated in certain localities or population groups and threaten to spill over into the wider population. In many developing countries most new infections occur in young adults, with young women especially vulnerable. Data on HIV are from the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). Changes in procedures and assumptions for estimating the data and better coordination with countries have resulted in improved estimates of HIV and AIDS. The models, which are routinely updated, track the course of HIV epidemics and their impact, making full use of information in HIV prevalence trends from surveillance data as well as survey data. The models take into account reduced infectivity among people receiving antiretroviral therapy (which is having a larger impact on HIV prevalence and allowing HIV-positive people to live longer) and allow for changes in urbanization over time in generalized epidemics. The estimates include plausibility bounds, which reflect the certainty associated with each of the estimates.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual