Core Indicators for Monitoring the Ending the HIV Epidemic Initiative (Preliminary Data)

HIV Surveillance Data Tables

Core Indicators for Monitoring the Ending the HIV Epidemic Initiative (Preliminary Data):
National HIV Surveillance System Data Reported through June 2022; and Preexposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Data Reported through March 2022

This issue of HIV Surveillance Data Tables is published by the Division of HIV Prevention (DHP), National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, Georgia.

Data are presented for diagnoses of HIV infection reported to CDC through June 2022 and preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) data reported through March 2022.

HIV Surveillance Data Tables is not copyrighted and may be used and copied without permission. Citation of the source is, however, appreciated.

Suggested Citation

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Core indicators for monitoring the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative (preliminary data): National HIV Surveillance System data reported through June 2022; and preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) data reported through March 2022. HIV Surveillance Data Tables 2022;3(3). https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/surveillance-data-tables/index.html . Published September 2022. Accessed [date].

Download the full report [PDF – 3 MB].

Technical Notes

The Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) initiative leverages critical scientific advances in HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and outbreak response [1]. The goal of the initiative is to reduce new HIV infections by 75% by 2025 and then by at least 90% by 2030. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) routinely releases HIV Surveillance Data Tables on the core indicators for EHE to allow for more timely monitoring of progress. The full list of EHE core indicators and their definitions can be found in the Technical Notes of the Core Indicators for Monitoring the Ending the HIV Epidemic Initiative report at https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/ pdf/library/reports/surveillance-data-tables/vol-1-no- 1/cdc-hiv-surveillance-tables-vol-1-no-1.pdf [PDF – 1.4 KB].

The tables included in this report provide preliminary data on HIV diagnoses and linkage to HIV medical care reported to CDC as of June 2022 for the years 2021 and 2022, and data on preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) coverage for the years 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 (preliminary). Data for the 3 indicators are provided at the national, state, and county levels (EHE Phase I jurisdictions only). See Tabulation and Presentation of Data for details on how the indicators are calculated.

Tabulation and Presentation of Data

Diagnoses of HIV Infection

Diagnoses of HIV infection are the numbers of per­sons aged ≥13 years with HIV diagnosed during Janu­ary 2021 through June 2022 (Tables 1a–d). Data presented were reported (after the removal of person­ally identifiable information) to CDC.

An evaluation of surveillance data (2015–2019 diagnoses) found that, on average, approximately 75% of HIV diagnoses are reported to CDC during the year of diagnosis and approximately 95% of HIV diagnoses are reported to CDC by the end of the fol­lowing year. Data reported to the National HIV Sur­veillance System (NHSS) are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached and should be interpreted with caution.

More information on counting diagnoses of HIV infection can be found at https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance/vol-33/ (HIV Surveillance Report, 2020).

Linkage to HIV Medical Care

Linkage to HIV medical care within 1 month of HIV diagnosis is measured for persons aged ≥ 13 years whose infection was diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and who resided in any of the jurisdictions (including EHE Phase I jurisdictions) with complete reporting of laboratory data to CDC at the time of diagnosis (Tables 2a–c). The numerator is the number of persons aged ≥ 13 years whose HIV infection was diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and who had ≥ 1 CD4 T-lymphocyte (CD4) or viral load (VL) tests within 1 month of HIV diagnosis. The denominator is the number of persons aged ≥ 13 years whose HIV infection was diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022. Reporting of linkage to HIV medical care data requires a minimum 3-month reporting delay to account for delays in reporting of laboratory results to NHSS; therefore, data on linkage to HIV medical care in these surveillance tables are for persons whose HIV infection was diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and was reported to NHSS through June 2022. Data are not provided for states and associated jurisdictions that do not have laws requiring reporting of all CD4 and viral loads, or that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC. Area without laws: Idaho. Areas with incomplete reporting: Kentucky, New Jersey, Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia), Puerto Rico, and Vermont.

Data reported to NHSS are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached and should be interpreted with caution.

More information on calculating linkage to care can be found at https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance/vol-27-no-3 (Monitoring selected national HIV prevention and care objectives by using HIV surveillance data—United States and 6 dependent areas, 2020). [PDF – 11 MB]

Preexposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Coverage

Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) coverage, reported as a percentage, is defined as the number of persons aged ≥ 16 years classified as having been prescribed PrEP during the specified year divided by the estimated number of persons aged ≥ 16 years who had indications for PrEP during the specified year (Tables 3a–c). PrEP coverage is an EHE indicator that is not a reportable disease or condition and is not reported to NHSS. Multiple data sources, described below, are used to calculate PrEP coverage.

Please use caution when interpreting PrEP data. Different data sources were used in the numerator and denominator to calculate PrEP coverage.

Persons prescribed PrEP

National pharmacy data from the IQVIA Real World Data—Longitudinal Prescriptions database (hereafter, IQVIA database) are used to classify persons aged ≥ 16 years who have been prescribed PrEP in the specific year. The IQVIA database captures prescriptions from all payers and represents approximately 93% of all prescriptions from retail pharmacies and 77% from mail-order outlets in the United States. The database does not include prescriptions from some closed health care systems that do not make their prescription data available to IQVIA. Therefore, these are minimum estimates of PrEP coverage. The annual number of persons classified as having been prescribed PrEP was based on a validated algorithm that discerns whether tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) was prescribed for PrEP after excluding prescriptions for HIV treatment, hepatitis B treatment, or HIV postexposure prophylaxis [2–4]. Tenofovir alafenamide and emtricitabine (TAF/FTC) was approved as an alternative drug for PrEP by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in October 2019. Starting in 2019, TAF/FTC was included in the algorithm to classify the number of persons prescribed PrEP.

The number of persons classified as having been prescribed PrEP is reported by sex, age group, and race/ethnicity. Transmission category data are not available in the IQVIA database, and race/ethnicity data are available for < 40% of persons with PrEP prescriptions. Please use caution when interpreting PrEP data by race/ethnicity. Race/ethnicity categories available in the IQVIA database include White, Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino, and other. The number of persons prescribed PrEP for each racial/ethnic group presented in this report was extrapolated by applying the racial/ethnic distribution of known records to those for which data on race/ethnicity were unknown.

Geographic Designations

In the IQVIA database, a person’s location is reported as a 3-digit ZIP code prefix (hereafter, ZIP3) assigned by the U.S. Postal Service. To estimate the number of persons prescribed PrEP at the state or county level, a probability-based approach is used to crosswalk between ZIP3s and states/counties by using data from (a) the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates by ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) [5], and (b) the U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development’s ZIP Code Crosswalk Files [6]. Because of reliability concerns, subnational estimates of < 40 are not included.

Persons with PrEP indications

ACS and U.S. Census Bureau files were used to estimate the number of men who have sex with men (MSM) in a jurisdiction [7, 8]. Next, behavioral data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) were used to estimate the proportion of HIV-negative MSM with indications for PrEP [9].

The number of HIV-negative MSM with indications for PrEP was multiplied by the ratio of percentage of diagnoses during the specified year attributed to other major transmission risk groups compared to the percentage among MSM in a given state or county. The estimated numbers of persons with indications for PrEP in the 3 major transmission risk groups (MSM, heterosexuals, persons who inject drugs) in each jurisdiction were then summed to yield a state- or county-specific estimate. State estimates were then summed for a national total of persons with indications for PrEP [7]. Jurisdictional estimates were rounded to the nearest 10.

The tables included in this report provide updated data on PrEP coverage for the years 2019–March 2022 by using the IQVIA data reported through December 2021. IQVIA conducts data quality assurance activities. As a result, the number of persons classified as having been prescribed PrEP in a given year might change from time to time. The impact of the changes may vary by demographic category nationally and by jurisdiction. The data sources used to estimate the number of persons with indications for PrEP have different schedules of availability. Consequently, the availability of a denominator lags the availability of a numerator by approximately 1 year. PrEP coverage data with a lagged denominator are considered preliminary.

For this release of HIV Surveillance Data Tables, 2018 denominators were used for 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 PrEP coverage data; consequently, 2019 through March 2022 PrEP coverage data are considered preliminary. In addition to being preliminary, data for the year 2020 should be interpreted with awareness of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on filling PrEP prescriptions in state/local jurisdictions [10].

More information on calculating PrEP coverage can be found at  (Monitoring selected national HIV prevention and care objectives by using HIV surveillance data—United States and 6 dependent areas, 2020 [PDF – 11 MB]).

References

  1. HHS. What is Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S.?. Updated July 2, 2022. Accessed August 31, 2022.
  2. Wu H, Mendoza MC, Huang YA, Hayes T, Smith DK, Hoover KW. Uptake of HIV preexposure prophylaxis among commercially insured persons—United States, 2010–2014. Clin Infect Dis 2017; 64(2):144–149. doi:10.1093/cid/ciw701
  3. CDC [Huang YA, Zhu W, Smith DK, Harris N, Hoover KW]. HIV preexposure prophylaxis, by race and ethnicity—United States, 2014–2016. MMWR 2018;67(41):1147–1150. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6741a3
  4. Furukawa NW, Smith DK, Gonzalez CJ, et al. Evaluation of algorithms used for PrEP surveillance using a reference population from New York City, July 2016– June 2018. Public Health Rep 2020;135(2):202–210. doi:10.1177/0033354920904085
  5. U.S. Census Bureau. American Community Survey 5-year data (2009-2020). https://www.census.gov/data/developers/data-sets/acs-5year.2019.html. Published March 2022. Accessed August 31, 2022.
  6. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD USPS ZIP code crosswalk files. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/usps_crosswalk.html. Updated August 2022. Accessed August 31, 2022.
  7. Grey JA, Bernstein KT, Sullivan PS, Purcell DW, Chesson HW, Gift TL, Rosenberg ES. Estimating the population sizes of men who have sex with men in US states and counties using data from the American Community Survey. JMIR public health and surveillance. 2016;2(1):e14. doi:10.2196/publichealth.5365
  8. Purcell DW, Johnson CH, Lansky A, et al. Estimating the population size of men who have sex with men in the United States to obtain HIV and syphilis rates. Open AIDS J 2012;6:98-107. doi:10.2174/ 1874613601206010098
  9. CDC [Smith DK, Van Handel M, Wolitski RJ, et al]. Vital Signs: Estimated percentages and numbers of adults with indications for preexposure prophylaxis to prevent HIV acquisition—United States, 2015. MMWR 2015;64(46):1291–1295. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6446a4
  10. Huang YA, Zhu W, Wiener J, Kourtis AP, Hall HI, Hoover KW. Impact of COVID-19 on HIV preexposure prophylaxis prescriptions in the United States—a timeseries analysis. Clin Infect Dis 2022:ciac038. doi:10.1093/cid/ciac038

Suggested Citation

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Core indicators for monitoring the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative (preliminary data): National HIV Surveillance System data reported through June 2022; and preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) data reported through March 2022. HIV Surveillance Data Tables 2022;3(3). https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/surveillance-data-tables/index.html . Published September 2022. Accessed [date].

Confidential information, referrals, and educational material on HIV

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Acknowledgments

HIV Surveillance Data Tables was prepared by the following staff and contractors of the Division of HIV Prevention, National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, CDC: Anna Satcher Johnson, Zanetta Gant, Ya-lin Huang, Weiming Zhu, Dawn Smith, Jianmin Li, Xiaohong Hu, Hao Chang, Pei Hou, Shawn McCort, Chelsea Walker, Emily Zhu, Lei Yu, Ishwarya Ravichandran, Avery Smithson, Wei Wei, Iddrisu Abdallah, Norma Harris, and Michael Friend (editing and desktop publishing).

The Web and Consumer Services Team of the Prevention Communications Branch are acknowledged for their contributions to the report website.

Publication of HIV Surveillance Data Tables was made possible by the contributions of the state and territorial health departments and the HIV surveillance programs that provided surveillance data to CDC.

Table 1a. Diagnoses of HIV infection among persons aged ≥13 years, by selected characteristics, January 2021 through June 2022—United States (preliminary)
2021
No.
2022 (January–June)
No.
Gender
Male 28,103 11,492
Female 6,469 2,572
Transgender womana 761 244
Transgender mana 54 15
Additional gender identityb 38 15
Age at diagnosis (yr)
13–24 6,801 2,526
25–34 13,024 5,303
35–44 7,510 3,203
45–54 4,380 1,843
≥55 3,710 1,463
Race/ethnicity
American Indian/Alaska Native 225 68
Asian 736 303
Black/African American 14,406 5,611
Hispanic/Latinoc 10,179 4,383
Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander 75 36
White 8,963 3,735
Multiracial 841 202
Transmission category (based on sex at birth)d
Male-to-male sexual contact 23,818 9,841
Injection drug use
      Male 1,424 523
      Female 1,060 410
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 1,308 447
Heterosexual contacte
      Male 2,315 928
      Female 5,402 2,139
Otherf
      Male 33 12
      Female 66 39
Region of residenceg
Northeast 5,007 1,845
Midwest 4,675 1,817
South 18,793 8,131
West 6,950 2,545
Total 35,425 14,338

Abbreviation: CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only].+A42:C47
Note. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022. Data are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution.

a“Transgender woman” includes individuals who were assigned “male” sex at birth but have ever identified as “female” gender. “Transgender man” includes individuals who were assigned “female” sex at birth but have ever identified as “male” gender.
bAdditional gender identity examples include “bigender,” “gender queer,” and “two-spirit.”
cHispanic/Latino persons can be of any race.
dTransmission category is classified based on a hierarchy of the risk factors most likely responsible for HIV transmission; classification is determined based on the person’s sex assigned at birth. Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category, therefore values may not sum to column subtotals and total. Data include transgender and additional gender identity persons.
eSexual contact with a person known to have, or with a risk factor for, HIV infection.
fOther risk factors, including hemophilia, blood transfusion, and risk factor not reported or not identified.
gData are based on residence at time of diagnosis of HIV infection.

Table 1b. Diagnoses of HIV infection among persons aged ≥13 years, by selected characteristics, January 2021 through June 2022—United States and 6 dependent areas (preliminary)
2021
No.
2022 (January–June)
No.
Gender
Male 28,435 11,588
Female 6,545 2,598
Transgender womana 761 244
Transgender mana 54 15
Additional gender identityb 38 15
Age at diagnosis (yr)
13–24 6,859 2,536
25–34 13,143 5,349
35–44 7,600 3,233
45–54 4,455 1,862
≥55 3,776 1,480
Race/ethnicity
American Indian/Alaska Native 225 68
Asian 737 303
Black/African American 14,409 5,611
Hispanic/Latinoc 10,580 4,502
Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander 75 36
White 8,966 3,738
Multiracial 841 202
Transmission category (based on sex at birth)d
Male-to-male sexual contact 24,065 9,914
Injection drug use
      Male 1,443 528
      Female 1,062 411
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 1,310 449
Heterosexual contacte   
      Male 2,378 943
      Female 5,475 2,164
Otherf
      Male 34 12
      Female 67 39
Region of residenceg
Northeast 5,007 1,845
Midwest 4,675 1,817
South 18,793 8,131
West 6,950 2,545
U.S. dependent areas 408 122
Total 35,833 14,460

Abbreviation: CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only].
Note. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022. Data are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution.

a“Transgender woman” includes individuals who were assigned “male” sex at birth but have ever identified as “female” gender. “Transgender man” includes individuals who were assigned “female” sex at birth but have ever identified as “male” gender.
bAdditional gender identity examples include “bigender,” “gender queer,” and “two-spirit.”
cHispanic/Latino persons can be of any race.
dTransmission category is classified based on a hierarchy of the risk factors most likely responsible for HIV transmission; classification is determined based on the person’s sex assigned at birth. Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category, therefore values may not sum to column subtotals and total. Data include transgender and additional gender identity persons.
eSexual contact with a person known to have, or with a risk factor for, HIV infection.
fOther risk factors, including hemophilia, blood transfusion, and risk factor not reported or not identified.
gData are based on residence at time of diagnosis of HIV infection.

Table 1c. Diagnoses of HIV infection among persons aged ≥13 years, by area of residence, January 2021 through June 2022—United States and 6 dependent areas (preliminary)
Area of residence 2021
No.
2022 (January–June)
No.
Alabama   447         167
Alaska     30              8
Arizona   799         371
Arkansas   344         156
California 4,139      1,357
Colorado   404         187
Connecticut   230            88
Delaware     80            46
District of Columbia   197            32
Florida 4,609      2,797
Georgia 2,168         758
Hawaii     64            18
Idaho     54 12
Illinois 1,051         373
Indiana   529         255
Iowa   124            44
Kansas   155            60
Kentucky   389         154
Louisiana   934         466
Maine     31            14
Maryland   755         331
Massachusetts   437            89
Michigan   633         280
Minnesota   299         110
Mississippi   425         129
Missouri   547         218
Montana     22              5
Nebraska   106            43
Nevada   496         183
New Hampshire     32            12
New Jersey 1,152         477
New Mexico   148            21
New York 2,123         790
North Carolina 1,395         646
North Dakota     36 1
Ohio   909         320
Oklahoma   375         105
Oregon   198         129
Pennsylvania   922         364
Rhode Island     67 11
South Carolina   667         211
South Dakota     30              6
Tennessee   833         360
Texas 4,226      1,334
Utah   131            23
Vermont     13 0
Virginia   801         379
Washington   458         226
West Virginia   148            60
Wisconsin   256         107
Wyoming       7              5
Subtotal   35,425   14,338
U.S. dependent areas
American Samoa 0 0
Guam 1 0
Northern Mariana Islands 0 0
Puerto Rico 402 122
Republic of Palau
U.S. Virgin Islands 5 0
Subtotal 408 122
Total 35,833   14,460

Abbreviation: CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only].
Note. Data are based on residence at the time of diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022. Data are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution.

Table 1d. Diagnoses of HIV infection among persons aged ≥13 years, by area of residence, January 2021 through June 2022—Ending the HIV Epidemic Phase I jurisdictions (preliminary)
Area of residence 2021
No.
2022 (January–June)
No.
Arizona
Maricopa County                                526 257
California
Alameda County                                186 79
Los Angeles County                            1,381 429
Orange County                                265 103
Riverside County                                245 118
Sacramento County                                150 22
San Bernardino County                                295 83
San Diego County                                285 6
San Francisco County                                188 94
District of Columbia                                197 32
Florida
Broward County                                652 385
Duval County                                295 133
Hillsborough County                                315 190
Miami-Dade County                            1,201 773
Orange County                                455 270
Palm Beach County                                317 163
Pinellas County                                127 85
Georgia
Cobb County                                143 40
DeKalb County                                312 107
Fulton County                                528 197
Gwinnett County                                138 41
Illinois
Cook County                                748 258
Indiana
Marion County                                217 97
Louisiana
East Baton Rouge Parish                                149 67
Orleans Parish                                147 71
Maryland
Baltimore City                                159 81
Montgomery County                                100 40
Prince George’s County                                231 94
Massachusetts
Suffolk County                                128 26
Michigan
Wayne County                                251 110
Nevada
Clark County                                442 162
New Jersey
Essex County                                263 99
Hudson County                                161 81
New York
Bronx County                                419 145
Kings County                                439 164
New York County                                324 130
Queens County                                336 119
North Carolina
Mecklenburg County                                278 116
Ohio
Cuyahoga County                                165 52
Franklin County                                187 54
Hamilton County                                124 39
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County                                369 147
Puerto Rico
San Juan Municipio                                  97 32
Tennessee
Shelby County                                298 133
Texas
Bexar County                                333 116
Dallas County                                780 287
Harris County                            1,143 422
Tarrant County                                308 106
Travis County                                226 78
Washington
King County                                219 136

Abbreviation: CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only].
Note. Data are based on residence at the time of diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022. Data are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution.

Table 2a. Linkage to HIV medical care within 1 month of HIV diagnosis among persons aged ≥13 years, by selected characteristics, January 2021 through March 2022—45 states and the District of Columbia (preliminary)
2021 2022 (January–March)
Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test
No. No. % No. % No. No. % No. %
Gender
Male 26,154 21,561 82.4 4,593 17.6 6,348 5,243 82.6 1,105 17.4
Female 5,930 4,875 82.2 1,055 17.8 1,420 1,143 80.5 277 19.5
Transgender womana  725 610 84.1 115 15.9  137 118 86.1  19 13.9
Transgender mana 52   48 92.3 4 7.7 10   9 90.0 1 10.0
Additional gender identityb 34   29 85.3 5 14.7 9   8 88.9 1 11.1
Age at diagnosis (yr)
13–24 6,378 5,125 80.4 1,253 19.6 1,464 1,168 79.8 296 20.2
25–34 12,118 9,982 82.4 2,136 17.6 2,862 2,350 82.1 512 17.9
35–44 6,947 5,764 83.0 1,183 17.0 1,716 1,438 83.8 278 16.2
45–54 4,028 3,374 83.8 654 16.2 1,079 901 83.5 178 16.5
≥55 3,424 2,878 84.1 546 15.9  803 664 82.7 139 17.3
Race/ethnicity
American Indian/Alaska Native 222 181 81.5  41 18.5 45 34 75.6 11 24.4
Asian  692 610 88.2  82 11.8  171 158 92.4  13 7.6
Black/African American 13,387 10,710 80.0 2,677 20.0 3,045 2,391 78.5 654 21.5
Hispanic/Latinoc 9,504 8,116 85.4 1,388 14.6 2,522 2,175 86.2 347 13.8
Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander 72   57 79.2  15 20.8 21   15 71.4 6 28.6
White 8,250 6,808 82.5 1,442 17.5 2,003 1,653 82.5 350 17.5
Multiracial  768 641 83.5 127 16.5 117 95 81.2  22 18.8
Transmission category (based on sex at birth)d
Male-to-male sexual contact 22,351 18,571 83.1 3,780 16.9 5,508 4,580 83.2 928 16.8
Injection drug use 2,216 1,693 76.4 523 23.6  475 371 78.0 105 22.0
   Male 1,254 943 75.2 311 24.8 251 191 76.4 59 23.6
   Female 962 750 78.0 212 22.0  224 179 79.8 45 20.2
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 1,210 965 79.8 244 20.2  238 189 79.3  49 20.7
Heterosexual contacte 7,028 5,820 82.8 1,208 17.2 1,676 1,358 81.1 317 18.9
   Male 2,065 1,695 82.1 370 17.9  489 402 82.1  88 17.9
   Female 4,963 4,125 83.1 837 16.9 1,187 957 80.6 230 19.4
Totalf 32,895 27,123 82.5 5,772 17.5 7,924 6,521 82.3 1,403 17.7

Abbreviations: CD4, CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; VL, viral load (copies/mL); CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only]; NHSS, National HIV Surveillance System [footnotes only].

Note. Data are based on residence at diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022, are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution. Linkage to HIV medical care was measured by documentation of ≥1 CD4 or VL tests ≤1 month after HIV diagnosis. Reporting of linkage to HIV medical care data requires a minimum 3-month reporting delay to account for delays in reporting of laboratory results to NHSS; therefore, data on linkage to HIV medical care in these surveillance tables are for persons with HIV diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and reported to NHSS through June 2022. Data not provided for states and associated counties that do not have laws requiring reporting of all CD4 and viral loads, or that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC. Area without laws: Idaho. Areas with incomplete reporting: Kentucky, New Jersey, Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia), and Vermont.

a“Transgender woman” includes individuals who were assigned “male” sex at birth but have ever identified as “female” gender. “Transgender man” includes individuals who were assigned “female” sex at birth but have ever identified as “male” gender.
bAdditional gender identity examples include “bigender,” “gender queer,” and “two-spirit.”
cHispanic/Latino persons can be of any race.
dTransmission category is classified based on a hierarchy of the risk factors most likely responsible for HIV transmission; classification is determined based on the person’s sex assigned at birth. Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category, therefore values may not sum to column subtotals and total. Data include transgender and additional gender identity persons.
eSexual contact with a person known to have, or with a risk factor for, HIV infection.
fIncludes persons whose infection was attributed to other risk factors including hemophilia, blood transfusion, and risk factor not reported or not identified. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful.

Table 2b. Linkage to HIV medical care within 1 month of HIV diagnosis among persons aged ≥13 years, by area of residence, January 2021 through March 2022—45 states and the District of Columbia (preliminary)
2021 2022 (January–March)
Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test
Area of residence No. No. % No. % No. No. % No. %
Alabama 447 335 74.9 112 25.1 97 18 18.6 79 81.4
Alaska 30 28 93.3 2 6.7 5 4 80.0 1 20.0
Arizona 799 676 84.6 123 15.4 242 197 81.4 45 18.6
Arkansas 344 267 77.6 77 22.4    86   58 67.4 28 32.6
California 4,139 3,475 84.0 664 16.0 867 737 85.0 130 15.0
Colorado 404 340 84.2 64 15.8 102   87 85.3 15 14.7
Connecticut 230 201 87.4 29 12.6    50   42 84.0 8 16.0
Delaware    80   68 85.0 12 15.0    23   21 91.3 2 8.7
District of Columbia 197 160 81.2 37 18.8    25   19 76.0 6 24.0
Florida 4,609 3,886 84.3 723 15.7 1,565 1,374 87.8 191 12.2
Georgia 2,168 1,800 83.0 368 17.0 402 340 84.6 62 15.4
Hawaii    64   54 84.4 10 15.6    11   11 100 0 0.0
Illinois 1,051 898 85.4 153 14.6 265 224 84.5 41 15.5
Indiana 529 405 76.6 124 23.4 136 110 80.9 26 19.1
Iowa 124 106 85.5 18 14.5    19   18 94.7 1 5.3
Kansas 155 141 91.0 14 9.0    36   31 86.1 5 13.9
Louisiana 934 751 80.4 183 19.6 207 172 83.1 35 16.9
Maine 31   27 87.1 4 12.9 7 7 100 0 0.0
Maryland 755 659 87.3 96 12.7 190 173 91.1 17 8.9
Massachusetts 437 399 91.3 38 8.7    71   63 88.7 8 11.3
Michigan 633 549 86.7 84 13.3 143 131 91.6 12 8.4
Minnesota 299 246 82.3 53 17.7    62   50 80.6 12 19.4
Mississippi 425 299 70.4 126 29.6    74   31 41.9 43 58.1
Missouri 547 426 77.9 121 22.1 127 103 81.1 24 18.9
Montana    22   20 90.9 2 9.1 5 4 80.0 1 20.0
Nebraska 106   90 84.9 16 15.1    32   28 87.5 4 12.5
Nevada 496 433 87.3 63 12.7 124 113 91.1 11 8.9
New Hampshire    32   32 100 0 0.0 4 3 75 1 25.0
New Mexico 148 127 85.8 21 14.2    16   15 93.8 1 6.3
New York 2,123 1,836 86.5 287 13.5 496 432 87.1 64 12.9
North Carolina 1,395 1,120 80.3 275 19.7 374 304 81.3 70 18.7
North Dakota    36   31 86.1 5 13.9 1 0 0.0 1 100
Ohio 909 760 83.6 149 16.4 200 175 87.5 25 12.5
Oklahoma 375 296 78.9 79 21.1 76 58 76.3 18 23.7
Oregon 198 156 78.8 42 21.2 65 54 83.1 11 16.9
Rhode Island 67 51 76.1 16 23.9 10 10 100 0 0.0
South Carolina 667 568 85.2 99 14.8 173 134 77.5 39 22.5
South Dakota    30   25 83.3 5 16.7 6 6 100 0 0.0
Tennessee 833 584 70.1 249 29.9 210 155 73.8 55 26.2
Texas 4,226 3,306 78.2 920 21.8 901 654 72.6 247 27.4
Utah 131 110 84.0 21 16.0    22   22 100 0 0.0
Virginia 801 637 79.5 164 20.5 198 167 84.3 31 15.7
Washington 458 403 88.0 55 12.0    98   88 89.8 10 10.2
West Virginia 148 108 73.0 40 27.0    38   22 57.9 16 42.1
Wisconsin 256 228 89.1 28 10.9 59 53 89.8 6 10.2
Wyoming 7 6 85.7 1 14.3 4 3 75.0 1 25.0
Total 32,895 27,123 82.5 5772 17.5 7,924 6,521 82.3 1,403 17.7

Abbreviations: CD4, CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; VL, viral load (copies/mL); CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only]; NHSS, National HIV Surveillance System [footnotes only].

Note. Data are based on residence at diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022, are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution. Linkage to HIV medical care was measured by documentation of ≥1 CD4 or VL tests ≤1 month after HIV diagnosis. Reporting of linkage to HIV medical care data requires a minimum 3-month reporting delay to account for delays in reporting of laboratory results to NHSS; therefore, data on linkage to HIV medical care in these surveillance tables are for persons with HIV diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and reported to NHSS through June 2022. Data not provided for states and associated counties that do not have laws requiring reporting of all CD4 and viral loads, or that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC. Area without laws: Idaho. Areas with incomplete reporting: Kentucky, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Vermont.

Table 2c. Linkage to HIV medical care within 1 month of HIV diagnosis among persons aged ≥13 years, by area of residence, January 2021 through March 2022—Ending the HIV Epidemic Phase I jurisdictions (preliminary)
2021 2022 (January–March)
Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test Total diagnoses ≥1 CD4 or VL tests No CD4 or VL test
Area of residence No. No. % No. % No. No. % No. %
Arizona
Maricopa County 526 456 86.7 70 13.3 158 133 84.2 25 15.8
California
Alameda County 186 166 89.2 20 10.8 45 40 88.9 5 11.1
Los Angeles County 1,381 1,150 83.3 231 16.7 289 238 82.4 51 17.6
Orange County 265 231 87.2 34 12.8 55 45 81.8 10 18.2
Riverside County 245 191 78.0 54 22.0 68 55 80.9 13 19.1
Sacramento County 150 136 90.7 14 9.3 15 15 100 0 0.0
San Bernardino County 295 225 76.3 70 23.7 63 49 77.8 14 22.2
San Diego County 285 240 84.2 45 15.8 1 0 0.0 1 100
San Francisco County 188 178 94.7 10 5.3 49 48 98.0 1 2.0
District of Columbia 197 160 81.2 37 18.8 25 19 76.0 6 24.0
Florida
Broward County 652 548 84.0 104 16.0 218 191 87.6 27 12.4
Duval County 295 235 79.7 60 20.3 87 72 82.8 15 17.2
Hillsborough County 315 257 81.6 58 18.4 104 92 88.5 12 11.5
Miami-Dade County 1,201 1,034 86.1 167 13.9 451 403 89.4 48 10.6
Orange County 455 380 83.5 75 16.5 154 131 85.1 23 14.9
Palm Beach County 317 265 83.6 52 16.4 99 89 89.9 10 10.1
Pinellas County 127 104 81.9 23 18.1 48 38 79.2 10 20.8
Georgia
Cobb County 143 121 84.6 22 15.4 20 19 95.0 1 5.0
DeKalb County 312 266 85.3 46 14.7 60 46 76.7 14 23.3
Fulton County 528 443 83.9 85 16.1 97 83 85.6 14 14.4
Gwinnett County 138 126 91.3 12 8.7 21 19 90.5 2 9.5
Illinois
Cook County 748 646 86.4 102 13.6 191 164 85.9 27 14.1
Indiana
Marion County 217 172 79.3 45 20.7 48 40 83.3 8 16.7
Louisiana
East Baton Rouge Parish 149 117 78.5 32 21.5 33 27 81.8 6 18.2
Orleans Parish 147 133 90.5 14 9.5 37 33 89.2 4 10.8
Maryland
Baltimore City 159 136 85.5 23 14.5 58 54 93.1 4 6.9
Montgomery County 100 88 88.0 12 12.0 24 22 91.7 2 8.3
Prince George’s County 231 199 86.1 32 13.9 45 40 88.9 5 11.1
Massachusetts
Suffolk County 128 123 96.1 5 3.9 21 19 90.5 2 9.5
Michigan
Wayne County 251 213 84.9 38 15.1 58 53 91.4 5 8.6
Nevada
Clark County 442 384 86.9 58 13.1 109 100 91.7 9 8.3
New York
Bronx County 419 365 87.1 54 12.9 96 81 84.4 15 15.6
Kings County 439 379 86.3 60 13.7 100 93 93.0 7 7.0
New York County 324 269 83.0 55 17.0 89 73 82.0 16 18.0
Queens County 336 289 86.0 47 14.0 75 66 88.0 9 12.0
North Carolina
Mecklenburg County 278 226 81.3 52 18.7 68 53 77.9 15 22.1
Ohio
Cuyahoga County 165 147 89.1 18 10.9 30 25 83.3 5 16.7
Franklin County 187 163 87.2 24 12.8 34 33 97.1 1 2.9
Hamilton County 124 110 88.7 14 11.3 27 25 92.6 2 7.4
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County 369 310 84.0 59 16.0 105 86 81.9 19 18.1
Tennessee
Shelby County 298 181 60.7 117 39.3 80 53 66.3 27 33.8
Texas
Bexar County 333 265 79.6 68 20.4 84 62 73.8 22 26.2
Dallas County 780 607 77.8 173 22.2 180 130 72.2 50 27.8
Harris County 1,143 867 75.9 276 24.1 285 201 70.5 84 29.5
Tarrant County 308 238 77.3 70 22.7 70 42 60.0 28 40.0
Travis County 226 185 81.9 41 18.1 48 40 83.3 8 16.7
Washington
King County 219 195 89.0 24 11.0 48 44 91.7 4 8.3

Abbreviations: CD4, CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; VL, viral load (copies/mL); CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only]; NHSS, National HIV Surveillance System [footnotes only].

Note. Data are based on residence at diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are for cases reported to CDC through June 2022, are considered preliminary until a 12-month reporting delay has been reached, and should be interpreted with caution. Linkage to HIV medical care was measured by documentation of ≥1 CD4 or VL tests ≤1 month after HIV diagnosis. Reporting of linkage to HIV medical care data requires a minimum 3-month reporting delay to account for delays in reporting of laboratory results to NHSS; therefore, data on linkage to HIV medical care in these surveillance tables are for persons with HIV diagnosed during January 2021 through March 2022 and reported to NHSS through June 2022. Data not provided for states and associated counties that do not have laws requiring reporting of all CD4 and viral loads, or that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC. Areas without law: Idaho. Areas with incomplete reporting: Kentucky, New Jersey, Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia), Puerto Rico, and Vermont.

Table 3a. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by selected characteristics—United States
2019 2020 (COVID-19 pandemic)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Sex at birth
Male 254,133 989,200 25.7 277,380 989,200 28.0
Female 21,039 227,010 9.3 23,584 227,010 10.4
Age (yr)
16–24 37,630 246,290 15.3 37,743 246,290 15.3
25–34 111,779 434,680 25.7 120,385 434,680 27.7
35–44 64,129 238,470 26.9 71,964 238,470 30.2
45–54 37,472 173,420 21.6 40,546 173,420 23.4
≥55 24,217 123,350 19.6 30,290 123,350 24.6
Race/ethnicityd
Black/African American 37,248 468,540 7.9 43,171 468,540 9.2
Hispanic/Latinoe 45,473 312,820 14.5 51,271 312,820 16.4
Other 12,330 131,180 9.4 12,842 131,180 9.8
White 180,264 300,650 60.0 193,746 300,650 64.4
Total 275,315 1,216,210 22.6 301,030 1,216,210 24.8
Table 3a. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by selected characteristics—United States
2021 2022 (January – March)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Sex at birth
Male 338,466 989,200 34.2 237,046 989,200 24.0
Female 28,065 227,010 12.4 14,323 227,010 6.3
Age (yr)
16–24 48,620 246,290 19.7 23,930 246,290 9.7
25–34 146,029 434,680 33.6 96,753 434,680 22.3
35–44 88,719 238,470 37.2 67,079 238,470 28.1
45–54 46,370 173,420 26.7 34,315 173,420 19.8
≥55 36,903 123,350 29.9 29,258 123,350 23.7
Race/ethnicityd
Black/African American 51,891 468,540 11.1 32,541 468,540 6.9
Hispanic/Latinoe 63,953 312,820 20.4 42,458 312,820 13.6
Other 15,724 131,180 12.0 10,907 131,180 8.3
White 235,251 300,650 78.2 165,503 300,650 55.0
Total 366,819 1,216,210 30.2 251,410 1,216,210 20.7

Abbreviations: PrEP, preexposure propphylaxis; n/a, not available.

Note. Data for years 2020 and 2021 should be interpreted with caution due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on filling PrEP prescriptions in state/local jurisdictions

aEstimated using data from IQVIA pharmacy database reported through March 2022 based on an algorithm that included FDA approved drugs for PrEP. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total.
bEstimated using 2018 data from National HIV Surveilance System, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Data are rounded to the nearest 10. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total. The data sources used to estimate the number of persons with indications for PrEP have different schedules of data availability. Consequently, the availability of a denominator may lag the availability of a numerator.
cPrEP coverage, reported as a percentage, was calculated as the number who have been prescribed PrEP divided by the estimated number of persons who had indications for PrEP.
dRace/ethnicity data were only available for <40% of persons prescribed PrEP each year. Number prescribed PrEP and PrEP coverage for race/ethnicity reported in the table were adjusted applying the distribution of records with known race/ethnicity to records with missing race/ethnicity.
eHispanic/Latino can be of any race.

Table 3b. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by area of residence—United States and Puerto Rico
2019 2020 (COVID-19 pandemic)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Alabama 1,833 11,020 16.6 1,909 11,020 17.3
Alaska 228 1,780 12.8 244 1,780 13.7
Arizona 4,580 25,780 17.8 5,060 25,780 19.6
Arkansas 730 5,130 14.2 868 5,130 16.9
California 41,611 165,030 25.2 42,277 165,030 25.6
Colorado 4,407 25,120 17.5 4,792 25,120 19.1
Connecticut 2,667 9,560 27.9 2,472 9,560 25.9
Delaware 473 4,400 10.8 471 4,400 10.7
District of Columbia 5,884 12,950 45.4 5,969 12,950 46.1
Florida 21,771 125,330 17.4 34,567 125,330 27.6
Georgia 8,647 39,030 22.2 9,772 39,030 25.0
Hawaii 817 4,360 18.7 901 4,360 20.7
Idaho 474 4,790 9.9 663 4,790 13.8
Illinois 16,656 55,860 29.8 15,979 55,860 28.6
Indiana 2,981 22,170 13.4 3,199 22,170 14.4
Iowa 1,428 4,760 30.0 1,561 4,760 32.8
Kansas 905 5,060 17.9 947 5,060 18.7
Kentucky 1,607 12,990 12.4 1,660 12,990 12.8
Louisiana 3,945 15,920 24.8 3,593 15,920 22.6
Maine 649 3,950 16.4 671 3,950 17.0
Maryland 4,930 27,300 18.1 4,806 27,300 17.6
Massachusetts 9,306 24,900 37.4 9,376 24,900 37.7
Michigan 4,351 29,570 14.7 4,669 29,570 15.8
Minnesota 4,203 21,720 19.4 4,213 21,720 19.4
Mississippi 952 4,530 21.0 1,100 4,530 24.3
Missouri 3,480 18,370 18.9 3,564 18,370 19.4
Montana 267 2,290 11.7 295 2,290 12.9
Nebraska 619 2,180 28.4 720 2,180 33.0
Nevada 2,184 11,390 19.2 2,505 11,390 22.0
New Hampshire 614 3,020 20.3 645 3,020 21.4
New Jersey 5,684 25,280 22.5 5,918 25,280 23.4
New Mexico 1,074 6,800 15.8 1,236 6,800 18.2
New York 35,317 72,640 48.6 34,152 72,640 47.0
North Carolina 5,403 32,490 16.6 6,154 32,490 18.9
North Dakota 191 1,520 12.6 187 1,520 12.3
Ohio 6,116 40,320 15.2 6,829 40,320 16.9
Oklahoma 1,158 11,030 10.5 1,527 11,030 13.8
Oregon 3,391 19,750 17.2 3,818 19,750 19.3
Pennsylvania 10,109 36,490 27.7 10,567 36,490 29.0
Puerto Rico 330 9,700 3.4 367 9,700 3.8
Rhode Island 1,074 3,880 27.7 1,149 3,880 29.6
South Carolina 1,724 10,390 16.6 2,115 10,390 20.4
South Dakota 152 910 16.7 146 910 16.0
Tennessee 3,894 22,460 17.3 5,170 22,460 23.0
Texas 23,126 123,790 18.7 27,528 123,790 22.2
Utah 2,037 6,840 29.8 2,374 6,840 34.7
Vermont 338 1,060 31.9 321 1,060 30.3
Virginia 4,404 31,430 14.0 5,120 31,430 16.3
Washington 9,886 40,050 24.7 10,062 40,050 25.1
West Virginia 567 5,250 10.8 522 5,250 9.9
Wisconsin 2,468 12,980 19.0 2,529 12,980 19.5
Wyoming 94 890 10.6 99 890 11.1
Table 3b. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by area of residence—United States and Puerto Rico
2021 2022 (January – March)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Alabama 2,772 11,020 25.2 2,046 11,020 18.6
Alaska 305 1,780 17.1 204 1,780 11.5
Arizona 6,575 25,780 25.5 4,849 25,780 18.8
Arkansas 1,285 5,130 25.0 882 5,130 17.2
California 50,334 165,030 30.5 35,695 165,030 21.6
Colorado 6,194 25,120 24.7 4,171 25,120 16.6
Connecticut 3,054 9,560 31.9 2,215 9,560 23.2
Delaware 641 4,400 14.6 499 4,400 11.3
District of Columbia 6,780 12,950 52.4 5,046 12,950 39.0
Florida 42,685 125,330 34.1 24,846 125,330 19.8
Georgia 12,206 39,030 31.3 8,447 39,030 21.6
Hawaii 1,137 4,360 26.1 871 4,360 20.0
Idaho 873 4,790 18.2 617 4,790 12.9
Illinois 18,417 55,860 33.0 13,672 55,860 24.5
Indiana 4,274 22,170 19.3 3,092 22,170 13.9
Iowa 1,962 4,760 41.2 1,303 4,760 27.4
Kansas 1,277 5,060 25.2 891 5,060 17.6
Kentucky 2,237 12,990 17.2 1,605 12,990 12.4
Louisiana 4,184 15,920 26.3 2,688 15,920 16.9
Maine 911 3,950 23.1 640 3,950 16.2
Maryland 5,809 27,300 21.3 3,962 27,300 14.5
Massachusetts 10,184 24,900 40.9 7,287 24,900 29.3
Michigan 5,925 29,570 20.0 4,015 29,570 13.6
Minnesota 5,270 21,720 24.3 3,846 21,720 17.7
Mississippi 1,602 4,530 35.4 962 4,530 21.2
Missouri 4,176 18,370 22.7 2,902 18,370 15.8
Montana 395 2,290 17.2 256 2,290 11.2
Nebraska 1,010 2,180 46.3 753 2,180 34.5
Nevada 4,896 11,390 43.0 1,950 11,390 17.1
New Hampshire 799 3,020 26.5 557 3,020 18.4
New Jersey 7,284 25,280 28.8 4,991 25,280 19.7
New Mexico 1,597 6,800 23.5 1,132 6,800 16.6
New York 39,146 72,640 53.9 27,437 72,640 37.8
North Carolina 7,971 32,490 24.5 5,669 32,490 17.4
North Dakota 248 1,520 16.3 182 1,520 12.0
Ohio 8,501 40,320 21.1 6,146 40,320 15.2
Oklahoma 2,333 11,030 21.2 1,557 11,030 14.1
Oregon 4,683 19,750 23.7 3,330 19,750 16.9
Pennsylvania 13,074 36,490 35.8 9,420 36,490 25.8
Puerto Rico 608 9,700 6.3 367 9,700 3.8
Rhode Island 1,515 3,880 39.0 1,095 3,880 28.2
South Carolina 2,960 10,390 28.5 2,000 10,390 19.2
South Dakota 217 910 23.8 153 910 16.8
Tennessee 7,247 22,460 32.3 5,130 22,460 22.8
Texas 34,787 123,790 28.1 24,087 123,790 19.5
Utah 3,276 6,840 47.9 2,299 6,840 33.6
Vermont 484 1,060 45.7 324 1,060 30.6
Virginia 6,288 31,430 20.0 4,162 31,430 13.2
Washington 11,392 40,050 28.4 8,167 40,050 20.4
West Virginia 711 5,250 13.5 498 5,250 9.5
Wisconsin 2,823 12,980 21.7 1,879 12,980 14.5
Wyoming 141 890 15.8 98 890 11.0

Abbreviations: PrEP, preexposure propphylaxis; n/a, not available.

Note. Data for years 2020 and 2021 should be interpreted with caution due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on filling PrEP prescriptions in state/local jurisdictions

aEstimated using data from IQVIA pharmacy database reported through March 2022 based on an algorithm that included FDA approved drugs for PrEP. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total.
bEstimated using 2018 data from National HIV Surveilance System, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Data are rounded to the nearest 10. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total. The data sources used to estimate the number of persons with indications for PrEP have different schedules of data availability. Consequently, the availability of a denominator may lag the availability of a numerator.
cPrEP coverage, reported as a percentage, was calculated as the number who have been prescribed PrEP divided by the estimated number of persons who had indications for PrEP.

Table 3c. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by area of residence—Ending the HIV Epidemic Phase I jurisdictions
2019 2020 (COVID-19 pandemic)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Arizona
Maricopa County 3,539 22,720 15.6 3,889 22,720 17.1
California
Alameda County 2,167 8,930 24.3 2,017 8,930 22.6
Los Angeles County 13,685 67,450 20.3 14,721 67,450 21.8
Orange County 2,044 10,510 19.4 2,209 10,510 21.0
Riverside County 1,791 11,080 16.2 1,925 11,080 17.4
Sacramento County 956 5,920 16.1 977 5,920 16.5
San Bernardino County 750 11,890 6.3 812 11,890 6.8
San Diego County 3,727 14,500 25.7 3,791 14,500 26.1
San Francisco County 8,815 10,840 81.3 8,109 10,840 74.8
District of Columbia 5,884 12,950 45.4 5,969 12,950 46.1
Florida
Broward County 3,831 20,470 18.7 6,760 20,470 33.0
Duval County 505 8,970 5.6 735 8,970 8.2
Hillsborough County 1,381 12,910 10.7 1,537 12,910 11.9
Miami-Dade County 6,494 21,760 29.8 10,235 21,760 47.0
Orange County 2,768 15,310 18.1 3,872 15,310 25.3
Palm Beach County 877 9,170 9.6 3,011 9,170 32.8
Pinellas County 1,133 9,530 11.9 1,219 9,530 12.8
Georgia
Cobb County 563 3,070 18.3 648 3,070 21.1
DeKalb County 1,561 6,290 24.8 1,721 6,290 27.4
Fulton County 3,295 13,120 25.1 3,593 13,120 27.4
Gwinnett County 681 3,240 21.0 790 3,240 24.4
Illinois
Cook County 13,617 39,060 34.9 12,883 39,060 33.0
Indiana
Marion County 1,143 9,150 12.5 1,205 9,150 13.2
Louisiana
East Baton Rouge Parish 495 1,810 27.3 536 1,810 29.6
Orleans Parish 1,519 4,590 33.1 1,338 4,590 29.2
Maryland
Baltimore City 899 6,330 14.2 855 6,330 13.5
Montgomery County 900 5,770 15.6 909 5,770 15.8
Prince George’s County 801 4,040 19.8 821 4,040 20.3
Massachusetts
Suffolk County 2,765 6,520 42.4 2,808 6,520 43.1
Michigan
Wayne County 1,200 9,270 12.9 1,231 9,270 13.3
Nevada
Clark County 1,867 11,670 16.0 2,105 11,670 18.0
New Jersey
Essex County 675 4,090 16.5 709 4,090 17.3
Hudson County 1,056 4,650 22.7 1,057 4,650 22.7
New York
Bronx County 2,207 5,570 39.6 2,034 5,570 36.5
Kings County 7,569 15,650 48.4 7,423 15,650 47.4
New York County 14,134 15,540 91.0 13,737 15,540 88.4
Queens County 3,866 9,230 41.9 3,803 9,230 41.2
North Carolina
Mecklenburg County 1,344 8,450 15.9 1,576 8,450 18.7
Ohio
Cuyahoga County 958 7,520 12.7 972 7,520 12.9
Franklin County 2,037 11,620 17.5 2,309 11,620 19.9
Hamilton County 567 7,720 7.3 636 7,720 8.2
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County 3,635 9,840 36.9 3,475 9,840 35.3
Puerto Rico
San Juan Municipiod –d 2,190 n/a –d 2,190 n/a
Tennessee
Shelby County 630 6,450 9.8 809 6,450 12.5
Texas
Bexar County 1,522 11,920 12.8 1,776 11,920 14.9
Dallas County 4,107 28,670 14.3 5,183 28,670 18.1
Harris County 4,932 40,670 12.1 5,987 40,670 14.7
Tarrant County 1,461 11,340 12.9 1,653 11,340 14.6
Travis County 4,546 11,590 39.2 5,062 11,590 43.7
Washington
King County 6,908 17,890 38.6 6,975 17,890 39.0
Table 3c. Number of persons prescribed PrEP, number of persons with PrEP indications, and PrEP coverage during January 2019 through March 2022, among persons aged ≥16 years, by area of residence—Ending the HIV Epidemic Phase I jurisdictions
2021 2022 (January – March)
Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec Persons Prescribed PrEPa Persons with PrEP Indicationsb PrEP Coveragec
No. No. % No. No. %
Arizona
Maricopa County 5,025 22,720 22.1 3,777 22,720 16.6
California
Alameda County 2,212 8,930 24.8 1,512 8,930 16.9
Los Angeles County 18,508 67,450 27.4 13,676 67,450 20.3
Orange County 2,843 10,510 27.1 1,921 10,510 18.3
Riverside County 2,530 11,080 22.8 1,849 11,080 16.7
Sacramento County 1,101 5,920 18.6 770 5,920 13.0
San Bernardino County 1,192 11,890 10.0 807 11,890 6.8
San Diego County 4,428 14,500 30.5 3,113 14,500 21.5
San Francisco County 8,155 10,840 75.2 5,792 10,840 53.4
District of Columbia 6,780 12,950 52.4 5,046 12,950 39.0
Florida
Broward County 8,298 20,470 40.5 4,765 20,470 23.3
Duval County 900 8,970 10.0 598 8,970 6.7
Hillsborough County 2,022 12,910 15.7 1,439 12,910 11.1
Miami-Dade County 11,491 21,760 52.8 5,887 21,760 27.1
Orange County 4,707 15,310 30.7 3,098 15,310 20.2
Palm Beach County 2,760 9,170 30.1 1,231 9,170 13.4
Pinellas County 1,652 9,530 17.3 1,237 9,530 13.0
Georgia
Cobb County 805 3,070 26.2 563 3,070 18.3
DeKalb County 2,067 6,290 32.9 1,458 6,290 23.2
Fulton County 4,271 13,120 32.6 3,017 13,120 23.0
Gwinnett County 996 3,240 30.7 696 3,240 21.5
Illinois
Cook County 14,748 39,060 37.8 11,042 39,060 28.3
Indiana
Marion County 1,588 9,150 17.4 1,184 9,150 12.9
Louisiana
East Baton Rouge Parish 595 1,810 32.9 355 1,810 19.6
Orleans Parish 1,531 4,590 33.4 990 4,590 21.6
Maryland
Baltimore City 986 6,330 15.6 667 6,330 10.5
Montgomery County 1,155 5,770 20.0 823 5,770 14.3
Prince George’s County 995 4,040 24.6 646 4,040 16.0
Massachusetts
Suffolk County 2,811 6,520 43.1 2,015 6,520 30.9
Michigan
Wayne County 1,555 9,270 16.8 1,018 9,270 11.0
Nevada
Clark County 4,303 11,670 36.9 1,573 11,670 13.5
New Jersey
Essex County 839 4,090 20.5 555 4,090 13.6
Hudson County 1,289 4,650 27.7 919 4,650 19.8
New York
Bronx County 2,092 5,570 37.6 1,199 5,570 21.5
Kings County 8,847 15,650 56.5 6,152 15,650 39.3
New York County 15,762 15,540 101.4 11,429 15,540 73.5
Queens County 4,288 9,230 46.5 3,011 9,230 32.6
North Carolina
Mecklenburg County 1,965 8,450 23.3 1,411 8,450 16.7
Ohio
Cuyahoga County 1,268 7,520 16.9 919 7,520 12.2
Franklin County 2,745 11,620 23.6 2,052 11,620 17.7
Hamilton County 816 7,720 10.6 571 7,720 7.4
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County 4,032 9,840 41.0 2,856 9,840 29.0
Puerto Rico
San Juan Municipiod 63 2,190 2.9 49 2,190 2.2
Tennessee
Shelby County 938 6,450 14.5 622 6,450 9.6
Texas
Bexar County 2,353 11,920 19.7 1,618 11,920 13.6
Dallas County 6,584 28,670 23.0 4,579 28,670 16.0
Harris County 7,487 40,670 18.4 5,222 40,670 12.8
Tarrant County 2,131 11,340 18.8 1,469 11,340 13.0
Travis County 5,812 11,590 50.1 4,181 11,590 36.1
Washington
King County 7,649 17,890 42.8 5,598 17,890 31.3

aEstimated using data from IQVIA pharmacy database reported through March 2022 based on an algorithm that included FDA approved drugs for PrEP. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total.
bEstimated using 2018 data from National HIV Surveilance System, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Data are rounded to the nearest 10. Data for which values are unknown were not reported thus values may not sum to column total. The data sources used to estimate the number of persons with indications for PrEP have different schedules of data availability. Consequently, the availability of a denominator may lag the availability of a numerator.
cPrEP coverage, reported as a percentage, was calculated as the number who have been prescribed PrEP divided by the estimated number of persons who had indications for PrEP.
dData value <40 was not reported due to unreliability.

Table 4. Ending the HIV Epidemic Phase I jurisdictions
Counties Territories States
Arizona Puerto Ricoa Alabama
Maricopa County    San Juan Municipioa Arkansas
California Kentuckya
Alameda County Mississippi
Los Angeles County Missouri
Orange County Oklahoma
Riverside County South Carolina
Sacramento County
San Bernardino County
San Diego County
San Francisco County
District of Columbia
Florida
Broward County
Duval County
Hillsborough County
Miami-Dade County
Orange County
Palm Beach County
Pinellas County
Georgia
Cobb County
DeKalb County
Fulton County
Gwinnett County
Illinois
Cook County
Indiana
Marion County
Louisiana
East Baton Rouge Parish
Orleans Parish
Maryland
Baltimore City
Montgomery County
Prince George’s County
Massachusetts
Suffolk County
Michigan
Wayne County
Nevada
Clark County
New Jerseya
Essex Countya
Hudson Countya
New York
Bronx County
Kings County
New York County
Queens County
North Carolina
Mecklenburg County
Ohio
Cuyahoga County
Franklin County
Hamilton County
Pennsylvaniaa
Philadelphia County
Tennessee
Shelby County
Texas
Bexar County
Dallas County
Harris County
Tarrant County
Travis County
Washington
King County

Abbreviations: CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [footnotes only]; PrEP, preexposure prophylaxis [footnotes only]; CD4, CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/μL) or percentage [footnotes only].

Note. For more information on the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. initiative, see https://www.hiv.gov/federal-response/ending-the-hiv-epidemic/overview.

aLinkage to care and viral suppression data are not provided for states and associated counties that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC: Kentucky, New Jersey, Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia), and Puerto Rico.