Profile Preparation
This profile was prepared by the Louisiana Office of Public Health
HIV/AIDS Surveillance Program in close collaboration with the Louisiana
Ryan White CARE Act and Prevention Programs and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). The Louisiana STD Control Program provided
direct guidance on the use and interpretation of STD (non-HIV) data, and
BRFSS data were provided by the Louisiana BRFSS program. The World Wide
Web was used as much as possible to obtain needed data. All the
sociodemographic data, vital statistics, substance abuse data, and YRBSS
information were downloaded from Web sites. Several of the Web sources
compile their data from other organizations and agencies, such as the
Kaiser Family Foundation (for insurance information) and the Health
Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) (for the CARE Act Data
Report [CADR]).
Throughout this report, the following statistical methods were used
to measure the effect of the epidemic upon specific populations, adjust
for delays in reporting, and account for cases with missing risk
information:
- HIV prevalence estimates were calculated using a method recommended
by the CDC. This method takes into account the reporting delay for HIV
(non-AIDS) and AIDS cases and divides the number of persons diagnosed
with HIV/AIDS by the estimated range of persons diagnosed with HIV
infection (71%–79%).
- Case rates were calculated for the 12-month period per 100,000
population. For these rates, denominators were derived from the 2000
census. The numerator is the number of reported cases that were
diagnosed during the 12-month period.
- When HIV/AIDS data are presented as trends, the data are adjusted
to account for reporting delay for recently diagnosed cases. Reporting
delay refers to the time between the diagnosis of a case and receipt of
the report by the health department. Cases recently diagnosed may not
yet have been reported; therefore, for recent periods, the number of
cases diagnosed, but not yet reported, is estimated and presented as
expected cases. (For the methods used to estimate the numbers of these
cases, see reporting delay in the Glossary.)
- Regarding "missing risk information," the cases that have been
diagnosed recently are more likely to be reported without a specified
risk (exposure). To provide data on the reclassification of risk over
time, the cases with missing risk information must be assigned to one of
the risk categories. Cases with missing risk information are distributed
to a risk category based on regional sex- and race-specific risk
probabilities provided by the CDC. Consequently, data adjusted for risk
redistribution represent the expected number of cases in each risk
category. For example, the adjusted number of cases attributed to
injection drug use in 2001 would be the sum of (1) the number of cases
diagnosed in 2001 in which injection drug use was the risk factor and
(2) the number of cases diagnosed in 2001 without risk information, but
in which injection drug use was assigned as the likely risk factor.
- The Bureau of the Census, in compliance with the Office of
Management and Budget Directive 15 (OMB 15), expanded race/ethnicity
reporting in 2000. The expanded questionnaire allowed respondents to
select 1 or more races to indicate their racial identity. However, for
comparisons with HIV/AIDS data for which information on only 1 race and
Hispanic ethnicity is collected, the race/ethnicity data obtained from
the Bureau of the Census were combined into 5 categories: white, not
Hispanic; black, not Hispanic; Hispanic; American Indian; and Asian. For
analyses involving small numbers of cases in some racial/ethnic groups,
those cases have been grouped in a category called other.
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