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The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Program (formerly the Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act) was first enacted into law in 1990, and amended in 1996, 2000, and 2006. The 2006 amendments, referred to as the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act of 2006 [1], established new criteria for eligibility determination for Eligible Metropolitan
Areas (EMA) and Emerging Communities (EC), and introduced a new funding category under Part A (formerly Title I) of the law. The new category of grantees is termed Transitional
Grant Areas (TGA). The 2006 amendments also changed the data requirements used for the formula award allocations.
In FY2008, the Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA), for the second year in a row, used counts of living cases of HIV in the Parts A and B (formerly Titles I and II) allocation formulae. Prior to FY2007, only AIDS cases, adjusted by a survival rate (estimated living AIDS cases), were used in the formulae. Beginning in FY2007, persons living with HIV (non-AIDS) as well as persons living with AIDS, as reported to and confirmed by the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are used to calculate funding allocation amounts. See
Technical Notes for further explanation.
As instructed by law, HRSA continues to use cumulative cases of AIDS reported to and confirmed by the Director of CDC for the most recent 5 calendar years to determine eligibility
for Part A grantees. Part A has two categories of grantees, Eligible Metropolitan Areas and Transitional Grant Areas. EMAs are defined as jurisdictions with more than 2,000 AIDS cases reported to and confirmed by the Director of CDC over the most recent 5 calendar years and with a minimum population
of 50,000 persons. (Prior to FY2007 the minimum population
threshold for inclusion as an EMA was 500,000.) An area will continue to be an EMA unless it fails to meet both of the following requirements for 3 consecutive fiscal years: a) A cumulative total of 2,000 or more cases of AIDS reported during the most recent period of 5 calendar years, and b) A cumulative total of 3,000 or more living cases of AIDS as of December 31 for the most recent calendar year for which such data are available. There are 22 EMAs for FY2008. The new category of Part A grantees, TGAs, are defined as those jurisdictions
with at least 1,000 but fewer than 2,000 AIDS cases reported to and confirmed by the Director of CDC over the most recent 5 calendar years and with a minimum population of 50,000 persons. An area will remain a TGA unless it fails to meet both of the following requirements for 3 consecutive
fiscal years: a) A cumulative total of at least 1,000—but fewer than 2,000—cases of AIDS reported during the most recent period of 5 calendar years, and b) A cumulative total of 1,500 or more living case of AIDS as of December 31 for the most recent calendar year for which such data are available.
For FY2007 and FY2008, those jurisdictions that received Title I funding in FY2006, but did not meet the new definition of an EMA or TGA as defined above were classified as TGAs. If these jurisdictions do not meet the definition of a TGA for 3 consecutive fiscal years, they will cease to be eligible for Part A funding. For FY2008, there were 34 TGAs, with 5 TGAs receiving
Part A funding for the first time in FY2007 (these 5 were Emerging Communities in FY2006). TGAs added in FY2007 were: Baton Rouge, LA; Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC; Indianapolis, IN; Memphis, TN-MS-AR; and Nashville-Davidson-
Murfreesboro, TN. No new TGAs were added in FY2008.
The geographic boundaries for all jurisdictions that received Part A funding in FY2008—both EMAs and TGAs—are those boundaries that were in effect when they were initially funded under Part A (formerly Title I). For all newly eligible areas, the boundaries are based on current metropolitan statistical area (MSA) boundary definitions determined by the Office of Management
and Budget for use in Federal statistical activities [2].
AIDS cases are also used to determine eligibility for Part B Emerging Communities funding. ECs are defined as metropolitan
areas for which there have been at least 500 but fewer than 1,000 AIDS cases reported to and confirmed by the Director of CDC over the most recent 5 calendar years. An area will remain an EC unless it fails to meet both of the following requirements for 3 consecutive fiscal years: a) A cumulative total of at least 500—but fewer than 1,000—cases of AIDS reported during the most recent period of 5 calendar years, and b) A cumulative total of 750 or more living cases of AIDS as of December 31 for the most recent year for which such data are available. A hold harmless provision was added for ECs, so that all ECs that were eligible for funding in FY2007 remained eligible for funding in FY2008, even if they no longer met the eligibility requirement.
As mentioned above, persons reported living with HIV and persons reported living with AIDS are used to determine funding
levels for Parts A and B. For FY2008, CDC provided HRSA with data files containing the total number of persons reported living with AIDS through calendar year 2006 for all jurisdictions
as well as the total number of persons living with HIV for all jurisdictions with name-based HIV reporting. Jurisdictions that did not yet have name-based HIV reporting sent tables containing the total number of code-based reported persons living with HIV directly to HRSA; those areas are listed in the
Technical Notes.
Under the revised legislation, HRSA was required to accept code-based or non-name HIV data when calculating
funding amounts. In response, HRSA, in consultation
with the CDC, developed a “Technical Guidance
for Submission of HIV non-AIDS Data Under the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act of 2006” to ensure that the data reported to HRSA by code-based areas followed a uniform process similar to the process used to report name-based data to the CDC. Data submitted directly to HRSA were required to be certified by the State Epidemiologist. The Technical Guidance also allowed the State Epidemiologist in areas with operational name-based reporting
systems established prior to December 31, 2006 to request that CDC report their HIV non-AIDS data to HRSA. The State Epidemiologist was required to make such requests in writing to both HRSA and CDC. As required by the legislation, HRSA reduced the total number of code-based reported persons living with HIV by 5 percent for those areas that reported their code-based data directly to HRSA. The code-based HIV cases were then added to the number of persons living with HIV and the number of persons living with AIDS reported to HRSA from CDC. For EMAs/TGAs that cross State lines, it was possible to have HIV cases reported by CDC from the name-based reporting
State(s) as well as HIV cases reported directly to HRSA from the code-based reporting State(s). The following areas had both name-based and code-based HIV cases included in their total: Boston, MA-NH; Philadelphia, PA-NJ; St. Louis, MO-IL; and Washington, DC-MD-VA-WV. The 5 percent reduction rule was only applied to the HIV cases reported from the code-based State(s). The number of persons living with HIV and the number of persons living with AIDS were then added together to arrive at the total number of living cases of HIV and AIDS for each EMA/TGA, EC, and State. These totals were used in the Part A and B funding formula calculations.
References
- Health Resources and Services Administration.
The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act of 2006.
Public Law 109-45. Accessed October 1, 2008.
- Office of Management and Budget.
Standards for defining metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas.
Federal Register
2000;65:82228-82238. Accessed October 1, 2008.
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