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Adult/Adolescent HIV Infection Cases, Reported among States with Confidential Name-Based Reporting, Cumulative through 2007

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 Cum. Rptd. HIV Cases Adult/Adolescent
United States100.0%1
Alabama1.9%
Alaska0.1%
Arizona1.9%
Arkansas0.7%
California7.3%
Colorado1.9%
Connecticut1.0%2
Delaware0.4%
District of Columbia0.6%
Florida11.9%3
Georgia3.3%
HawaiiNA
Idaho0.1%
Illinois2.9%
Indiana1.3%
Iowa0.2%
Kansas0.4%
Kentucky0.5%
Louisiana2.5%
Maine0.1%
MarylandNA
Massachusetts0.3%
Michigan2.1%
Minnesota1.1%
Mississippi1.5%
Missouri1.6%
Montana0.0%
Nebraska0.2%
Nevada1.2%
New Hampshire0.2%
New Jersey5.5%
New Mexico0.3%
New York13.8%
North Carolina4.6%
North Dakota0.0%
Ohio2.6%
Oklahoma0.7%
Oregon0.5%
Pennsylvania3.7%4
Rhode Island0.0%
South Carolina2.2%
South Dakota0.1%
Tennessee2.3%
Texas7.8%5
Utah0.3%
VermontNA
Virginia3.3%
Washington1.3%
West Virginia0.2%
Wisconsin0.8%
Wyoming0.0%
Guam0.0%
Puerto Rico2.0%
Virgin Islands0.1%
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Notes: 

Includes only persons with HIV infection that has not progressed to AIDS.

Includes data from 47 states and from 5 U.S. dependencies, possessions, and independent nations in free association with the U.S. with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting as of December 2007. U.S. total also includes persons whose state or area of residence is unknown.

Data on HIV infection cases from areas with name-to-code and code-based surveillance are not included in the HIV data tables pending evaluations demonstrating acceptable performance under CDC guidelines and the development of methods to report such data to CDC.

HIV reporting was initiated during the following years: 1985 (Colorado, Minnesota, Wisconsin); 1986 (Idaho, South Carolina); 1987 (Arizona, Missouri); 1988 (Alabama, Indiana, Mississippi, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota); 1989 (Arkansas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wyoming); 1990 (North Carolina, Ohio); 1992 (Connecticut - Children Only, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, Tennessee); 1993 (Louisiana); 1995 (Nebraska); 1997 (Florida); 1998 (Iowa, New Mexico, Virgin Islands); 1999 (Alaska, Kansas, Texas); 2000 (New York, Guam); 2001 (American Samoa, N. Mariana Islands); 2002 (Pennsylvania); 2003 (Georgia, Puerto Rico); 2004 (Kentucky); 2005 (Connecticut - All Cases, New Hampshire); 2006 (California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Maine, Montana, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington); 2007 (Massachusetts).

Sources: 

Table 18, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report: Cases of HIV Infection and AIDS in the United States and Dependent Areas, 2007, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Department of Health and Human Services, 2009. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/surveillance/resources/reports/2007report/default.htm.

Definitions: 

Name-to-code system: Names are collected and, after any necessary public health follow-up, names are converted to codes.
Code-based system: Codes are used instead of names.
NA: State does not have confidential name-based reporting.

Footnotes: 
  1. U.S. total includes persons from the Pacific Islands and 1,016 persons who reported from areas with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting but who were residents of other areas and persons who reported from areas with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting but whose area of residence is unknown.
  2. Beginning in 1992, Connecticut had name-based HIV reporting for cases in children only. From January 2002 through December 2004, Connecticut had name- or code-based HIV reporting for cases in adolescents and adults. As of January 2005, Connecticut has name-based reporting of all cases of HIV infection.
  3. Florida has confidential name-based HIV infection reporting for only the diagnoses made during July 1997 or later.
  4. On October 18, 2002, Pennsylvania initiated confidential name-based HIV infection reporting in all areas except Philadelphia. Code-based reporting was implemented in Philadelphia in March 2004, and the switch to name-based reporting was made in October 2005.
  5. From February 1994 through December 1998, Texas reported HIV infection in children only.


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