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The Ryan White CARE Act was enacted by Congress in 1990
and reauthorized with amendments in 1996 and 2000. The primary purpose
of the act is to “provide emergency assistance to localities that are
disproportionately affected by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus epidemic”.
The amended act requires formula grants based on the “estimated number
of living cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome in the eligible
area involved”. Estimates were derived by using methods specified in
the act. The amount of funds received by each eligible metropolitan
area (EMA), (under Title I), or state, (under Title II) is determined
by the locality’s proportion of the total estimated number of living
persons with AIDS. The Ryan White CARE act formula is used by the Health
Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for the legislative requirements
of the CARE act. Additional information is available at www.hrsa.gov.
This report presents the AIDS case counts (based on AIDS
surveillance data reported to CDC through June 30, 2001) that were provided
to HRSA in July 2001 (Table 1, AIDS case counts by state; Table 2, AIDS
case counts by EMA; Table 3, AIDS case counts for cross-state EMAs).
HRSA applies the weights provided by CDC to these counts to determine
the proportional distribution of persons living with AIDS.
Tables 4 and 5 are comparisons of three methods for estimating
the number of persons living with AIDS by state and EMA. Columns 1 and
2 are the estimated number and percentage distribution according to
the Ryan White CARE Act formula. Columns 3 and 4 are the numbers of
persons with AIDS reported to CDC and assumed to be alive (cases minus
deaths). Columns 5 and 6 are data adjusted for delays in the reporting
of cases and deaths to produce point estimates of the number of people
living with AIDS. (See the technical notes for computational details
of each method.)
CDC routinely adjusts
data for the presentation of trends in the epidemic. Data to estimate
the number of people diagnosed with AIDS, living with AIDS (i.e., AIDS
prevalence), and the number of deaths among persons with AIDS are statistically
adjusted to correct for temporal delays in the reporting of cases and
deaths. To assess trends in incidence, deaths, or prevalence, it is
preferable to use adjusted data, presented by year of diagnosis instead
of year of report, to eliminate artifacts of reporting to the surveillance
system. The CDC method nearly always produces the highest counts because
a statistical model is being used to “add in” the AIDS cases not yet
reported but already diagnosed. Since the use of
antiretroviral therapies became widely available in 1996, trends in
new AIDS diagnoses have become less reflective of patterns in HIV transmission
and more representative of a delay in diagnosing persons with HIV, and
ensuring their linkage to effective treatment and care. Surveillance
of HIV infection would provide data more reflective of current trends
in HIV incidence and prevalence; however, HIV infection surveillance
is not conducted in all states. An Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee
is assessing the adequacy and reliability of HIV surveillance data for
use as the basis for distributing Ryan White CARE act funds. More information
about the IOM project is available at www.iom.edu. |