1 / 47

HIV/STD in Texas

HIV/STD in Texas. Ann Robbins Texas Department of State Health Services June 2009. In 2007, there were 122,717 reported diagnoses of sexually transmitted diseases. Chlamydia Cases, 2000-2008. Chlamydia Case Rates by Year of Report and Race/Ethnicity - Texas, 2000-2008.

chase-lee
Télécharger la présentation

HIV/STD in Texas

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/STD in Texas Ann Robbins Texas Department of State Health Services June 2009

  2. In 2007, there were 122,717 reported diagnoses of sexually transmitted diseases.

  3. Chlamydia Cases, 2000-2008

  4. Chlamydia Case Rates by Year of Report and Race/Ethnicity - Texas, 2000-2008

  5. Chlamydia Case Rates by County 2007

  6. Gonorrhea Cases, 2000-2008

  7. Gonorrhea Case Rates by Race/Ethnicity 2000-2008

  8. Gonorrhea Case Rates by County 2007

  9. Primary and Secondary Syphilis Cases by Year of Report, 2000-2008

  10. P&S Syphilis Case Rates by Year of Report and Sex, 2000-2008 Male Female

  11. P&S Syphilis Case Rates by Year of Report and Race/Ethnicity - Texas, 2000-2008

  12. P&S Syphilis Case Rates by County -Texas, 2008

  13. P&S Syphilis Cases by Year of Report by Sex and MSM Risk, 2000-2008

  14. Between 2003 and 2007, the number of Texans living with HIV/AIDS increased by 30%.

  15. Persons Living with HIV/AIDS, New Diagnoses of HIV/AIDS, and Deaths among those with HIV/AIDS

  16. Half of the PLWHA in Texas live in Houston or Dallas

  17. Texas Persons Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) by County 2006

  18. Persons living with HIV/AIDS by Area, 2006

  19. Rate of PLWHA by Geographic Area, 2006

  20. The rate of living HIV cases among Blacks in Texas is 3 to 4 times higher than the rate in Whites or Latinos.

  21. Number and Rate of PLWHA by Race/Ethnicity, 2003-2007 Number Rate The number of black persons living with HIV/AIDS surpassed that of whites in 2005. The rate in 2007 was 4-5 times higher for blacks than for others.

  22. Rate of new HIV/AIDS in Black women is 8 times higher than rate in Latinas, 20 times higher than rate in White women.

  23. New Diagnoses of HIV/AIDS, by Sex, Race/Ethnicity and Mode, 2006

  24. New Diagnoses, Number and Rate, by Sex and Race/Ethnicity, 2006

  25. 2007 Incidence Estimate • Over 5,000 newly acquired HIV infections in Texas in 2007 • Blacks accounted for 39% • Latinos accounted for 30% • Whites/Others accounted for 31%

  26. One in…are Living with HIV/AIDS One in 378 of all Texans One in 498 of White Texans One in 565 of Hispanic Texans One in 112 of Black Texans

  27. Persons Living with HIV/AIDS, 2006: Impact of HIV/ AIDS Area = Multi-County Eligible Metropolitan Area / Transitional Grant Area (Health Resources and Services Administration Ryan White Part A Funding Areas)

  28. In Texas, heterosexual transmissions account for a growing number of newly diagnosed HIV cases, but MSM still make up the majority of new diagnoses.

  29. Men who have sex with men account for more than half of both PLWHA and new diagnoses in Texas

  30. Mode of transmission in new and living cases of HIV in Texas, 2007

  31. HIV/AIDS among Childbearing Women & Perinatal Infections

  32. Late Diagnosis of HIV

  33. 1 in 3 Texans with HIV was diagnosed with AIDS within 1 year of first HIV + test

  34. % of Texans with HIV and AIDS Diagnoses within 1 Month and 1 Year

  35. BRFSS: HIV Testing Behavior Ever Tested for HIV among persons aged 18-64 years, Texas, 2007

  36. Incidence Surveillance: 2007 Incidence Estimate

  37. Effect of Awareness on Transmission ~25% Unaware of Infection Accounting for: ~54% of New Infections Marks, et al AIDS 2006;20:1447-50 ~75% Aware of Infection ~46% of New Infections People with HIV/AIDS: 1,039,000-1,185,000 New Sexual Infections Each Year: ~32,000

  38. Refining Transmission Rates by Knowledge of Serostatus1-3 Unaware of HIV seropositivity Transmission rate estimated at 8.8 to 10.8% Aware of HIV seropositivity Transmission rate estimated at 1.7 to 2.4% 1. Holtgrave DR et al. Int J STD AIDS. 2004;15(12):789-92. 2. Marks G et al. AIDS. 2006;20(10):1447-50. 3. Holtgrave, Pinkerton. JAIDS. 2007.

  39. Percent Reporting HIV Test, 2005Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System

  40. Consequences of Late Diagnosis Late testing results in missed opportunities for preventing HIV infections Late diagnosis may also increase the costs of hospital care and management of opportunistic infections, especially immediately after diagnosis Direct care costs in the year following HIV diagnosis were more than 200% higher for patients who presented late* Late diagnosis and entry to care are associated with less favorable prognosis and survival *HB Krentz, MC Auld, MJ Gill (2004)

  41. Consequences & Cost Delayed entry into care is associated with less favorable prognosis and survival Delayed entry into care is associated with increased cost of hospital care and management of opportunistic infections Mean annual costs for late presenters were 2.2 times greater than those for early presenters* Hospitalizations and immediate initiation of drug therapy main drivers of cost Increased costs were present even when age, gender, risk factor, education, ethnicity and living arrangements were held constant* *Krentz HB, Auld MC, Gill MJHIV Medicine 2004, 5:93-98

  42. Participation in Care and Treatment

  43. Number and Proportion out of Care, Texas 2007

  44. Complexity Intersecting and Accelerating Epidemics Psychiatric involvement Major depression Substance use and abuse Need to address structural factors Constrict or eliminate choices Physically, socially, psychologically separate and isolate

  45. Results: Bivariate Linear Correlations Between Social Determinants and Teen Pregnancy Rates, 1999 Pearson correlation coefficients across 48 states with available data, df = 46 *P <.01 Crosby RA et al. J Adolesc Health. 2006;38(5):556-9.

  46. Social Determinants of STIs and AIDS CasesUS States, 1999 Pearson correlation coefficients across 48 states with available data, df = 46 *P <.01 Holtgrave DR et al. Sex Transm Infect. 2003;79(1):62-4.

  47. Technology... Biomedical prevention interventions Vaccine Circumcision Pre-exposure prophilaxis Increasing relative insensitivity of WB Antigen testing NAAT

More Related