Thursday, April 25, 2013

CA HIV Stats Dropped 34 Percent Since 2007

The news from Valorie Eckert, our state's HIV/AIDS epidemiologist, about new HIV infections and the status of transmissions is good because declines continue.


After reading the latest semi-annual HIV/AIDS surveillance report for California, current through December 31, 2012, I had an extended phone conversation with Eckhert about Figure 4, pictured.

It shows reported HIV (not AIDS) cases since the middle of 2006 and includes much cleaning up of moving from non-names-based reporting to names-based reporting, and late reports from many local health departments and private labs.

The red bar, for the first full year of names-based reporting is the highest level of HIV cases reported, while the lime bar is for 2012 and shows the lowest numbers.

Because annual HIV stats are omitted from the chart, I requested from Eckert hard numbers for these years and she emailed these stats. Frequency = new HIV diagnoses:

hiv_aids_dx_year
Frequency
Percent
Cumulative
Frequency
Cumulative
Percent
2006
6125
16.26
6125
16.26
2007
6217
16.50
12342
32.76
2008
5716
15.17
18058
47.94
2009
5418
14.38
23476
62.32
2010
5160
13.70
28636
76.02
2011
4957
13.16
33593
89.17
2012
4078
10.83
37671
100.00

The drop from 2007's 6,217 diagnoses down to the 4,078 in 2012 is around 34%. 

Seeking clarification about diagnosed cases versus reported incidents being a better reflection of the epidemic, I asked Eckert to confirm this and she replied:

Yes, you are right. Diagnosed cases are closer to actual transmissions than the reported. Reported is used more for quality assurance purposes. We like for cases to be reported within 3 months of diagnoses. And typically they are, but unfortunately some are reported years after diagnosis for one reason or another.

I asked her to include the frequency numbers in future semi-annuals so the general public could have those numbers along with the colorful charts, and better understand the state of HIV in California. Eckert said this idea was already in development in Sacramento.

Eckert finally walked me through the most comprehensive epidemiological profile for the state, current through the end of 2009. Of key importance, she said, was this page:


The blue line represents HIV infection diagnoses (peeked 1988-1992), the red one is for AIDS cases (peeked 1993), and the green line represents AIDS deaths (peeked 1994-1995). Interesting that for all categories, the peeks came before the introduction of protease inhibitors and AIDS cocktails.

I'm looking forward to more HIV statistics from Eckert and the Office of AIDS, because I believe we'll see the downward trends maintained.

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