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The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the United States Jennifer Kates, M.A., M.P.A. Vice President and Director, HIV Policy Kaiser Family Foundation KaiserEDU.org.

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Presentation on theme: "The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the United States Jennifer Kates, M.A., M.P.A. Vice President and Director, HIV Policy Kaiser Family Foundation KaiserEDU.org."— Presentation transcript:

1 The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the United States Jennifer Kates, M.A., M.P.A. Vice President and Director, HIV Policy Kaiser Family Foundation KaiserEDU.org Tutorial February 2006

2 New infections each year 40,000 People living with HIV/AIDS 1,039,000 – 1,185,000 People with HIV/AIDS not in care 42 – 59% People with HIV who don’t know they’re infected 24 – 27% The U.S. Epidemic: Snapshot of Key Data Note: Data are estimates. Sources: CDC, 2005; Glynn, K. et al., CDC, "Estimated HIV prevalence in the United States at the end of 2003", Presentation at the National HIV Prevention Conference, 2005; Fleming, P., et al., “HIV Prevalence in the United States 2000”, 9 th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, 2002. Figure 1

3 New AIDS Cases People Living with AIDS New AIDS Cases, Deaths, and People Living with AIDS, 1985-2004 Deaths among People with AIDS Note: Data are estimates. Source: CDC, Data Request, 2006. Figure 2 Deaths and New AIDS Diagnoses People Living with AIDS 2004

4 Impact on Communities of Color

5 Proportion of AIDS Cases, by Race/Ethnicity, 1985-2004 White, non-Hispanic African American Latino Asian/Pacific Islander American Indian/ Alaska Native Percent of AIDS Diagnoses Note: Data are estimates. Source: CDC, Data Request, 2006. Figure 3 2004

6 Notes: U.S. Population estimates do not include U.S. dependencies, possessions, and associated nations; persons who reported more than one race were included in multiple categories. May not total 100% due to rounding. Total AIDS diagnoses in 2004 include persons of unknown race or multiple races. AI/AN = American Indian/Alaskan Native Sources: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005; U.S. Census Bureau, Population Estimates Program, 2004 Population Estimates. 1% 4% AIDS Diagnoses and Population, by Race/Ethnicity, 2004 49% 13% 28% 69% 20% 14% White, non-Hispanic African American Latino Asian/Pacific Islander AI/AN <1% 1% AIDS Cases 42,514 U.S. Population 293,655,404 Figure 4

7 Impact on Women

8 Women as a Share of New AIDS Diagnoses Note: Data are estimates. Sources: CDC, Data Request, 2006. Figure 5

9 New AIDS Diagnoses by Race/Ethnicity and Sex, 2004 33% White 15% Latina Women N = 11,109 Men N = 30,203 67% African American 17% White 1% Other 20% Latino 44% African American 2% Other Note: Data are estimates for adults/adolescents and do not include cases from the U.S. dependencies, possessions, and associated nations, and cases of unknown residence. Source: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005. Figure 6

10 Reported HIV Cases Among Teen Girls and Younger Women, 2003 Notes: Data based on person’s age at diagnosis, from 41 areas with confidential name-based HIV surveillance for adults and adolescents in 2003. Source: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Adolescents, L265 Slide Series Through 2003. Figure 7

11 HIV Spread Primarily Through Sex, Increasingly Heterosexual 19852004 19% IDU 65% MSM 13% Other 3% 31% Heterosexual 22% IDU 42% MSM 6% Other Notes: Data are estimates. May not total 100% due to rounding. Sources: CDC, Presentation by Dr. Harold Jaffe, “HIV/AIDS in America Today”, National HIV Prevention Conference, 2003; CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005. Figure 8 Heterosexual

12 Regional, State, & Local Impact

13 AIDS Case Rate per 100,000 Population by Region, 2004 Notes: Case rates calculated by KFF; data do not include U.S. territories and possessions. Sources: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005; U.S. Census Bureau, Population Estimates Program, 2004 Population Estimates. Figure 9

14 Top 10 States by AIDS Case Rate per 100,000 Population, 2004 U.S. Rate = 15.0 Source: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005. Figure 10

15 Top 10 States by AIDS Case Rate per 100,000 African Americans, 2004 U.S. Rate = 73.9 Note: Data not available for U.S. dependencies, possessions, and independent nations in free association with the United States. Source: Kaiser Family Foundation, State Health Facts (CDC, Special Data Request, November 2005). Figure 11

16 Top 10 States by AIDS Case Rate per 100,000 Among Women, 2004 U.S. Rate = 9.5 Source: Kaiser Family Foundation, State Health Facts (CDC, Special Data Request, November 2005). Figure 12

17 Top 10 MSAs by AIDS Case Rate per 100,000 Population, 2004 U.S. Rate = 15.0 Note: MSAs with 500,000 or more population. Source: CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 16, 2005. Figure 13

18 Federal Funding of Health Care and Prevention Services for HIV/AIDS

19 Federal Funding for HIV/AIDS by Category, FY 2005 *Not including international research which is counted in the research and prevention categories. Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation, Federal Funding for HIV/AIDS: The FY 2006 Budget Request, 2/05; DHHS, Office of Budget/ASBTF, 2/05; SSA, Office of the Actuary, 4/05; CMS, Office of the Actuary, 2/05; State Department, Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator; U.S. Congress, FY 2005 Consolidated Appropriations Bill and Conference Report. US$ Billions Total: $19.7 billion Figure 14

20 Major Federal Sources of Funding for HIV/AIDS Care Medicaid Medicare Ryan White CARE Act Others include: Department of Veterans Affairs; SAMHSA; Community and Migrant Health Centers Figure 15 Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation, Financing HIV/AIDS Care: A Quilt with Many Holes, May 2004; DHHS, Office of Budget/ASBTF, 4/05.

21 Provides health & long-term care coverage for more than 52 M low-income people Largest source of coverage for people with HIV/AIDS  ≈250,000 Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV/AIDS  Reflects epidemic’s impact on low-income populations Many with HIV/AIDS qualify through disability-related pathway Mandatory and Optional Services  All states cover Rx drugs Medicare Medicaid’s Role in HIV/AIDS Care Figure 16 Federal Medicaid Spending on HIV/AIDS Care as Percent of Federal Spending on HIV/AIDS Care FY 2005 Medicaid 49% ($5.7B) All Other 51% ($6.0B) Total: $11.7 B Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicare and HIV/AIDS, 9/05; KCMU, The Medicaid Program at a Glance, 1/05. Medicaid HIV/AIDS spending estimate from CMS, Office of the Actuary, 2005, and HHS Office of the Budget, 2005.

22 Covers nearly 42 M seniors and persons with disabilities Second largest source of HIV/AIDS coverage  ≈100,000 Medicare beneficiaries with HIV/AIDS,  Many have supplemental assistance, including Medicaid and ADAP to pay for drugs New Medicare Part D Drug Coverage  Concerns about adequacy of formularies and transition of Dual Eligibles (ARVs yes, other Rx?)  Effect on ADAP? Medicaid Medicare’s Role in HIV/AIDS Care Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicare and HIV/AIDS, 9/05; Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicare at a Glance, 9/05. Medicare HIV/AIDS spending estimate from CMS, Office of the Actuary, 2005, and HHS Office of the Budget, 2005. Figure 17 Medicare Spending on HIV/AIDS Care as Percent of Federal Spending on HIV/AIDS Care FY 2005 Total: $11.7 B Medicare 25% ($2.9B) All Other 75%($8.8B)

23 The Ryan White CARE Act Original intent: relief to safety net (public hospitals) Important safety-net for uninsured and low-income individuals Discretionary program, not entitlement Only disease-specific discretionary grant program for care for people with HIV/AIDS Builds on Medicaid  Gap filler in terms of eligibility AND services Services provided include: comprehensive primary care support services, medications What you get depends on where you live $2.1 B in FY 2005 Figure 18

24 Components of the CARE Act Title I: Eligible Metropolitan Areas (Cities) Title II: Funding to States  Includes earmark for AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) Title III: Funds early intervention services, capacity building, planning Title IV: Funds Services for Women, Youth, Children, Infants Other Funding for: AIDS Education and Training Centers, Dental Services, Special Projects of National Significance Figure 19 ADAP Clients, by Income Level, June 2004 Sources: DHHS, HRSA, HIV/AIDS Bureau; KFF, NASTAD, National ADAP Monitoring Report, April, 2005. <100% FPL 51% 101-200% FPL 29% 201-300% FPL, 11% Unknown 3%>300% FPL 5%

25 HIV Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)  Most prevention funding  Funds go to states; some cities; community based organizations; other entities/programs Additional prevention funding also at: Department of Veterans Affairs, SAMHSA, and other agencies National HIV prevention goal (reduce new infections by 50% by 2005) was not met Medicare Ryan White Figure 20 HIV Prevention Funding at CDC, FY 1995-2005 (US $ Millions) All Other 51% ($6.0B) Sources: CDC, Personal Communication, 2006; CDC, HIV Prevention Strategic Plan Through 2005. $731.7 $589.8 $616.8 $656.6 $749.7 $793.6

26 CDC’s “Advancing HIV Prevention: New Strategies for A Changing Epidemic” Announced in 2003 Aims to:  reduce barriers to early diagnosis of HIV  increase access to quality medical care, treatment, and ongoing prevention services for with HIV. Four Main Strategies  Incorporate HIV testing as a routine part of care in traditional medical settings  Implement new models for diagnosing HIV infections outside medical settings (e.g., rapid testing)  Prevent new infections by working with people diagnosed with HIV and their partners  Further decrease mother-to-child HIV transmission Figure 21 Sources: CDC, Advancing HIV prevention: New strategies for a changing epidemic. MMWR 2003;52:329-332; CDC, AHP: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/prev_prog/AHP/default.htm.

27 Key Summary Points about the Domestic Epidemic Approaching 25 years of AIDS Tremendous successes in the U.S. including  significant reduction in new infections since the 1980s  antiretroviral treatment and people living longer  reduction in mother to child transmission But the U.S. epidemic is not over - troubling signs, potential increases among some populations Impact varies across country – complex & “local”  Minority Americans, particularly African Americans, women, young people, men who have sex with men Many challenges remain for prevention, care, treatment, and research Figure 22


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