1 / 14

HIV-Infected Women: An Update

HIV-Infected Women: An Update. June 28, 2007 Kathleen McDavid, PhD, MPH HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC

qabil
Download Presentation

HIV-Infected Women: An Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HIV-Infected Women: An Update June 28, 2007 Kathleen McDavid, PhD, MPH HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the presenter’s and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

  2. Core HIV/AIDS Surveillance Information Flow

  3. Estimated Number of AIDS Cases, Deaths, and Persons Living with AIDS: United States, 1985–2005 Note: Data have been adjusted for reporting delays.

  4. Female Context Diagnoses in 2005 11,710 estimated new diagnoses of HIV/AIDS 127,150 females living with HIV/AIDS Deaths in 2005 4,128 estimated deaths of females with AIDS (25% of all deaths) HIV and AIDS as cause of death in 2004 6th cause of death for females 25–34 years 5th cause of death for all females 35–44 years

  5. Proportion of Female AIDS Cases over Time

  6. Estimated* Number of HIV/AIDS Diagnoses by Age Group and Sex: 33 States, 2001–2005 *Adjusted for reporting delays

  7. Proportion of HIV/AIDS Cases Among Female Adults and Adolescents, by Transmission Category and Age at Diagnosis: 33 States, 2005 Note: Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection regardless of AIDS status at diagnosis. Data from 33 States with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting since at least 2001. Data have been adjusted for reporting delays,and cases without risk factor information were proportionally redistributed.* Heterosexual contact with a person known to have, or to be at high risk for, HIV infection.† Includes hemophilia, blood transfusion, perinatal exposure, and risk factors not reported or identified.

  8. Proportion of HIV/AIDS Cases and Population among Female Adults and Adolescents, by Race and Ethnicity: 33 States, 2005 Note: Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection regardless of AIDS status at diagnosis. Data form 33 States with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting since at least 2001. Data have been adjusted for reporting delays. * Includes 87 female adults and adolescents of unknown race or multiple races.

  9. Estimated Number of HIV and AIDS Cases and Rates for Female Adults and Adolescents, by Race and Ethnicity: 33 States, 2005 Note: Data include persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection regardless of AIDS status at diagnosis.Data from 33 States with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting since at least 2001.Data have been adjusted for reporting delays. * Includes 87 female adults and adolescents of unknown race or multiple races.

  10. Rank of Cause of Death for Races and Ethnic Groups HIV/AIDS as cause of death in 2004 Leading cause for Black females 25–34 years 3rd cause for Black females 35–44 years 4th cause for Hispanic females 35–44 years 4th cause for Black females 45–54 years

  11. Estimated Number of Perinatally Acquired AIDS Cases by Year of Diagnosis: United States, 1985–2005

  12. Selected CDC-Supported Efforts Revised HIV testing guidelines (2006) Prevention interventions  SISTA, RAPP, DEBI, REP+, Comm. Demo Proj, Microfinance African American Initiative (2007) Media/Educational campaigns  Take charge. Take the test.  One test, two lives.

  13. Acknowledgements Suzanne Whitmore RADT staff Andy Mitsch HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch staff Graphics Unit at DHAP

  14. Kathleen McDavid, PhD, MPH Epidemiologist HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention KMcDavid@cdc.gov 404.639.2050 Contact Information

More Related