Abstract

The most frequently used criteria for cognitive impairment in people with HIV are the HIV–associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) criteria, developed in 2007 by a working group formed by the US National Institute of Mental Health.1 The HAND criteria (sometimes referred to as the Frascati criteria) were intended for use in research, but the terminology has become widely used to refer to clinical burden of cognitive impairment in people with HIV across diverse settings globally.2

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