Provider Resources

At a glance

Clinicians are important stakeholders in the prevention and treatment of HIV, viral hepatitis, STDs, and tuberculosis. The following links provide access to a variety of education and implementation resources designed to help you deliver high quality prevention and care services to your patients.

A doctor works from a laptop computer.

HIV clinical care delivery resources

The CDC HIV Nexus: Access information on HIV prevention strategies, healthcare practices and educational materials.

HIV clinical care delivery campaign resources

CDC develops a variety of resources for health care providers through its Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign. Examples of campaign resources are included below. For a complete listing of campaign resources, please visit the Let’s Stop HIV Together webpage.

Campaign fact sheets

HIV trainings and continuing medical education

CDC and other organizations provide educational modules and training opportunities on key elements of HIV care delivery. You can access some of these training and education resources using the links below. For a complete listing of available resources, please visit the Continuing Medical Education credits and Continuing Education units on the HIV Nexus webpage.

  • HIV Prevention Certified Provider: The program is an online, self-paced CME curriculum composed of five free e-learning courses in HIV prevention detailing the pertinent clinical and practice information.

HIV consultation and referral services

CDC and other organizations offer HIV consultation resources for providers. Examples of these consultation services are identified below. For a complete listing, please visit the HIV Hotlines Library.

CDC Info: CDC Info is CDC's national health information hotline, providing answers to your questions regarding HIV, how to protect yourself, and where to get an HIV test.

  • 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)
  • 1-888-232-6348 TTY

AIDS Info: A service of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), AIDS Info offers access to the latest, federally approved HIV/AIDS medical practice guidelines, HIV treatment and prevention clinical trials, and other research information for health care providers, researchers, people affected by HIV/AIDS, and the general public.

  • 1-800-HIV-0440 (448-0440)
  • 1-888-480-3739 TTY1-301-315-2816 (Outside United States)

The National HIV Clinicians Consultation Center: Access expert clinical advice on providing optimal care for HIV-positive patients, advice on HIV management in pregnant women and infants, hepatitis C management, substance use management, PrEP, and PEP.

Viral hepatitis clinical care delivery resources

CDC provides a range of professional resource documents to support delivery of high-quality prevention and care services for hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E. You can access these resources using the links below or by visiting the Division of Viral Hepatitis' Health Professional Tools.

  • ABC Table (PDF): This three-page table on Hepatitis A, B, and C provides an overview of statistics, transmission, risk factors, clinical features, screening, testing, and vaccination recommendations.
  • Viral Hepatitis Questions and Answers for Health Professionals: CDC shares answers to common questions health professionals ask about different viral hepatitides. These can be accessed from the links below:
  1. Hepatitis A Q&A for Health Professionals
  2. Hepatitis B Q&A for Health Professionals
  3. Hepatitis C Q&A for Health Professionals
  4. Hepatitis D Q&A for Health Professionals
  5. Hepatitis E Q&A for Health Professionals

Viral hepatitis trainings and continuing medical education

CDC and other organizations provide educational modules and training opportunities on key elements of viral hepatitis care delivery. You can access some of these training and education resources using the links below. For a complete listing of available resources, please visit the Division of Viral Hepatitis' Training Resources page.

  • Hepatitis C Online: University of Washington is funded by the Division of Viral Hepatitis to develop a comprehensive, online self-study course for medical providers on diagnosis, monitoring, and management of hepatitis C virus infection. Free CME and CNE credit available.

STD clinical care delivery resources

CDC and other organizations develop tools to help health care providers deliver high-quality STD prevention, care and treatment. These include:

  • STD Fact Sheets: CDC provides detailed web-based information for health care providers on several STDs, including those listed below. Detailed fact sheets include specific testing and treatment recommendations, as well as citations, so the reader can research the topic in-depth.

STD trainings and continuing medical education

CDC and other organizations provide educational modules and training opportunities on key elements of STD care delivery. Examples of these training opportunities are included below. For a complete listing of these resources, please visit the Division of STD Prevention's Training Resources page.

  • National STD Curriculum: The National STD Curriculum is an online modular learning experience that helps users learn how to manage STDs. It is continuously updated and integrates the most recent STD Treatment Guidelines. Free CME/CNE are available.
  • STD Clinical Slides: The STD Clinical Slides depict symptoms of STDs. They are designed for use by health care providers and health educators and may not be suitable for all audiences.
  • Partner Services: This module provides an overview of principles for discussing partner services referral with patients. Free CME, CNE, and CHES credits are available.

STD clinical consultation network

Health care providers with STD consultation requests can contact the STD Clinical Consultation Network (STDCCN). This service is provided by the National Network of STD Clinical Prevention Training Centers and operates five days a week. STDCCN is convenient, simple and free to health care providers and clinicians. More information is available on the STDCCN website.

Tuberculosis clinical care delivery resources

CDC and other organizations develop tools to aid health care providers in delivering high quality tuberculosis and latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) prevention, care, and treatment. For a complete listing of available resources, please visit Tools for Health Care Providers, Latent Tuberculosis Infection Resource Hub, and the Fact Sheet Library.

  • Latent Tuberculosis Infection: A Guide for Primary Health Care Providers: This guide is intended for primary care providers who care for individuals and populations who may be at risk for infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is the presence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the body without signs and symptoms, or radiographic or bacteriologic evidence of tuberculosis disease. In addition to this guide, CDC has developed several factsheets and web-based FAQs for health care providers on LTBI screening and treatment, including but not limited to:
  1. Targeted Tuberculosis Testing and Interpreting Tuberculin Skin Test Results Fact Sheet
  2. Interferon-Gamma Release Assays (IGRAs) – Blood Tests for TB Infection Fact Sheet
  3. Clinical Overview of Latent Tuberculosis Infection
  4. 3HP Regimen Medication Tracker
  • Testing and Diagnosis of TB Infection and TB Disease: This webpage provides information for health care providers on testing options for tuberculosis and their relative effectiveness, as well as steps for diagnosing tuberculosis. In addition to web-based information and fact sheets on tests for tuberculosis infection, CDC guidance for diagnosing tuberculosis disease is summarized in the following factsheet:
  1. Diagnosis of Tuberculosis Disease Fact Sheet
  • Treatment for TB Disease: This webpage provides information for health care providers on treatment regimens for drug-susceptible and drug-resistant tuberculosis, including the relative effectiveness of different treatment options. In addition to web-based information, CDC provides the following fact sheets for health care providers on treating drug-resistant tuberculosis:
  1. Treatment for Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
  2. Treatment of MultiDrug-Resistant Tuberculosis Fact Sheet
  • ICD-10-CM Codes for Tuberculosis (TB): Find information on new and modified codes, which were implemented in the 2020 release of ICD-10-CM on October 1, 2019, that allow healthcare providers to improve clinical documentation related to LTBI and tuberculosis disease

Tuberculosis training and continuing medical education

CDC and other organizations provide educational modules and training opportunities on key elements of tuberculosis care delivery. You can access some of these training and education resources using the links below. For a complete listing of available resources, please visit the Division of Tuberculosis Elimination's Tools for Healthcare Providers and Continuing Education Activities pages.

  • Tuberculosis 101 for Health Care Workers: This web-based course is designed to educate health care workers about basic concepts related to tuberculosis prevention and control in the United States. The target audience for the course includes newly hired tuberculosis program staff and health care workers in areas related to tuberculosis (such as individuals who work in correctional facilities or HIV clinics).
  • Interactive Core Curriculum on Tuberculosis: What the Clinician Should Know: The curriculum provides health care providers and other public health professionals with information on diagnosing and treating latent tuberculosis infection and tuberculosis disease. The target audience of the course is health care providers caring for people with or at high risk for tuberculosis disease.
  • Self-Study Modules on Tuberculosis: This series of educational modules is designed to provide information about tuberculosis in a self-study format.

Tuberculosis centers of excellence for training, education, and medical consultation

The CDC's Division of Tuberculosis Elimination funds four Tuberculosis Centers of Excellence for Training, Education, and Medical Consultation. These centers support domestic tuberculosis control and prevention efforts with a focus on two major activities:

  • Increasing knowledge, skills, and abilities for tuberculosis prevention and control through communication, education, and training activities, and
  • Improving sustainable evidence-based tuberculosis clinical practices and patient care through the provision of expert medical consultation.

You may access the Centers of Excellence Tuberculosis Training and Education Products at the training products webpage.