HIV/AIDS: State of Florida Mandatory Update

HIV/AIDS in the United States


Introduction

The Global Picture of HIV/AIDS

Post-Exposure Prophylaxis

Social Issues

Conclusion

References

Test

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The NAMES Project AIDS quilt, representing people who have died of AIDS, in front of the Washington Monument. Courtesy of the National Institutes of Health.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that there were about 1,106,400 persons living with HIV in the U.S. at the end of 2006 (2008a). Of those individuals, approximately 1 in 5 (21%) do not know they are infected. In 2008, CDC adjusted its estimate of new HIV infections because of new technology developed by the agency. For many years, the CDC estimated there were roughly 40,000 new HIV infections each year in the United States. New results shows there were dramatic declines in the number of new HIV infections from a peak of about 130,000 in the mid 1980s to a low of roughly 50,000 in the early 1990s. Results also shows that new infections increased in the late 1990s, followed by a leveling off since 2000 at about 55,000 per year. In 2006, an estimated 56,300 individuals were newly infected with HIV (CDC, 2008).

There were no dramatic changes in the demographics of persons reported to be HIV infected (See Figure 2). The greatest number of new cases is still among men, especially men who have sex with men (MSM), while the most common route of infection among women is heterosexual unprotected sex (CDC, 2008a). There has been a sharp decrease in mother to child transmission from 1,650 in the 1990's to <200 due to routine screening of pregnant women, use of antiretroviral medication for treatment and prophylaxis, cesarean section if indicated, and avoiding breastfeeding (CDC, 2006a; CDC, 2006c).


Figure 2. Routes of Infection for HIV cases in the US in 2006 (CDC, 2008d)


The burden of HIV infection was disproportionate among populations. Blacks made up 12% of the adult and adolescent population in the United States in 2006, but accounted for 46.1% of persons estimated to be living with HIV. Similarly, nearly half (48.1%) of the persons living with HIV were MSM, and although not precisely known, the percentage of MSM in the general population is estimated to be much lower. Data from CDC's National Survey of Family Growth indicate that, among males aged 15 -- 44 years, 3.7% ever have had anal sex with another male, and the proportion of men who had a male sexual partner in the past 12 months was 2.9% (CDC, 2008a).

Continue on to The Progression of HIV Infection/Change in CDC AIDS Definition