Care Outcomes Among Black or African American Persons with Diagnosed HIV in Rural, Urban, and Metropolitan Statistical Areas — 42 U.S. Jurisdictions, 2018

Shacara Johnson Lyons, MSPH1; André F. Dailey, MSPH1; Chenchen Yu, MPH1,2; Anna Satcher Johnson, MPH1 (View author affiliations)

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Summary

What is already known about this topic?

Disparities in HIV care outcomes exist for Black persons with diagnosed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, and access to care and treatment services varies by residence area.

What is added by this report?

During 2018, rural Black persons received a higher percentage of late-stage HIV diagnosis (25.2%) than did those in urban (21.9%) and metropolitan areas (19.0%). Linkage to care within 1 month of diagnosis was similar across geographic areas; however, viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was highest in metropolitan areas (63.8%).

What are the implications for public health practice?

Early diagnosis and prompt treatment of Black persons with HIV infection, especially in rural areas, are necessary to reduce disparities in HIV care outcomes.

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During 2018, Black or African American (Black) persons accounted for 43% of all diagnoses of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the United States (1). Among Black persons with diagnosed HIV infection in 41 states and the District of Columbia for whom complete laboratory reporting* was available, the percentages of Black persons linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis (77.1%) and with viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis (62.9%) during 2018 were lower than the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative objectives of 95% for linkage to care and viral suppression goals (2). Access to HIV-related care and treatment services varies by residence area (35). Identifying urban-rural differences in HIV care outcomes is crucial for addressing HIV-related disparities among Black persons with HIV infection. CDC used National HIV Surveillance System (NHSS) data to describe HIV care outcomes among Black persons with diagnosed HIV infection during 2018 by population area of residence§ (area). During 2018, Black persons in rural areas received a higher percentage of late-stage diagnoses (25.2%) than did those in urban (21.9%) and metropolitan (19.0%) areas. Linkage to care within 1 month of diagnosis was similar across all areas, whereas viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was highest in metropolitan areas (63.8%). The Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative supports scalable, coordinated, and innovative efforts to increase HIV diagnosis, treatment, and prevention among populations disproportionately affected by or who are at higher risk for HIV infection (6), especially during syndemics (e.g. with coronavirus disease 2019).

CDC analyzed data reported to NHSS for Black persons aged ≥13 years who received a diagnosis of HIV during 2018 in 41 statesand the District of Columbia, jurisdictions in which laboratory reporting was complete as of December 31, 2019. Stage of disease** at diagnosis was classified using the 2014 surveillance case definition for HIV infection based on age-specific CD4 counts or percentages of total lymphocytes (2,7). Linkage to care within 1 month of diagnosis was measured by documentation of one or more CD4 counts or percentage of viral load test results within 1 month after diagnosis. Viral suppression within 6 months of HIV diagnosis was defined as a viral load of <200 HIV RNA copies/mL within 6 months of HIV diagnosis. Data were statistically adjusted by using multiple imputation techniques to account for missing HIV transmission categories (8). Analyses were conducted using SAS (version 9.4; SAS Institute).

Among 14,502 Black persons who received a diagnosis of HIV infection during 2018, a total of 897 (6.2%) lived in a rural area, 1,920 (13.2%) lived in an urban area, and 11,685 (80.6%) lived in a metropolitan area. The percentage of Black persons who received a late (stage 3, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) diagnosis of HIV infection was highest in rural areas (25.2%), followed by urban and metropolitan areas (21.9% and 19.0%, respectively) (Table 1) (Supplementary Figure, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/102576). Females were more likely than were males to receive a late-stage diagnosis. The highest percentage of late-stage diagnoses was among females in rural areas (females, rural: 31.4%, urban: 23.1%, metropolitan: 20.6%; males, rural: 23.0%, urban: 21.5%, metropolitan: 18.6%). The highest percentages of late-stage diagnoses occurred among persons aged 45–54 years in both rural and metropolitan areas (47.9% and 31.4%, respectively); in urban areas, the percentage of late-stage diagnoses was highest among persons aged ≥55 years (43.1%). By transmission category, the percentage of late-stage diagnoses was highest in all areas among males whose infection was attributed to heterosexual contact (rural: 37.2%, urban: 32.5%, metropolitan: 28.3%).

Overall, the percentage of Black persons with HIV infection diagnosed during 2018 who were linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis was 76.7% in rural areas, 77.0% in urban areas, and 77.2% in metropolitan areas (Table 2) (Supplementary Figure, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/102576). Males were less likely than were females to be linked to care, regardless of area (males, rural: 75.2%, urban: 75.0%, metropolitan: 76.4%; females, rural: 81.8%, urban: 82.7%, metropolitan: 79.5%). Males aged 45–54 years in rural and urban areas with infection attributed to heterosexual contact (rural: 69.9%, urban: 67.1%) and males aged 13–24 years in metropolitan areas with infection attributed to heterosexual contact (62.3%) accounted for the lowest percentage of being linked to care compared with persons with other modes of transmission in those areas.

Overall, the percentage of Black persons aged ≥13 years in rural areas with HIV diagnosed during 2018 who had <200 copies of viral RNA per mL (viral suppression) within 6 months of diagnosis was 59.6% in rural areas, 59.7% in urban areas, and 63.8% in metropolitan areas (Table 3) (Supplementary Figure, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/102576). The percentage of males with viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was lower than the percentage among females, regardless of area (males, rural: 58.0%, urban: 57.8%, metropolitan: 62.4%; females, rural: 64.0%, urban: 65.1%, metropolitan: 68.1%). By age group and area, the lowest percentage of viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was among persons aged 45–54 years in rural and urban areas (52.1% and 56.4%, respectively) and persons aged 13–34 years in metropolitan areas (62.6%). In rural and urban areas, the lowest percentage of viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was among males aged 45–54 years with infection attributed to male-to-male sexual contact and to heterosexual contact (44.2% and 42.5%, respectively). In metropolitan areas, the lowest percentage of viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was among males aged 13–24 years with infection attributed to heterosexual contact (51.7%) and males aged 25–34 years with infection attributed to injection drug use (IDU) (45.0%).

Discussion

During 2018, one in four (25.2%) diagnosed HIV infections among Black persons in rural areas was a late-stage diagnosis, a percentage that was higher than that among Black persons in urban (21.9%) and metropolitan (19.0%) areas. The percentages of patients linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis were similar in all areas, whereas the percentages of persons with viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis were lower in rural (59.6%) and urban (59.7%) areas than in metropolitan areas (63.8%). In all areas, the percentages of persons who were linked to care within 1 month of diagnosis and who had viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis were substantially below the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative targets of 95% (9). These findings likely underscore known differences in health-related behaviors, physical and sociocultural environments, and access to and use of health care systems among Black urban and rural HIV populations (3,4).

By transmission category, the highest percentages of late-stage diagnoses in all areas were among males with infection attributed to heterosexual contact. The lowest levels of linkage to care within 1 month of diagnosis were among males in rural areas with infection attributed to both male-to-male sexual contact and IDU, and males in urban areas with infection attributed to IDU. Viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis was least common in all areas among males aged ≥13 years with infection attributed to IDU. Broader implementation of routine HIV testing is needed to identify persons with undiagnosed infections and to initiate early treatment, particularly among older persons. Interventions that support patient retention and re-engagement in HIV care are necessary to improve care outcomes and reduce HIV transmission. Locally tailored strategies among Black persons who inject drugs and sexually active adults at higher risk for HIV infection should be implemented for effective prevention in both urban and rural areas.

The findings in this report are subject to at least three limitations. First, analyses were limited to the 42 jurisdictions with complete laboratory reporting; these jurisdictions might not be representative of all Black persons living with diagnosed HIV infection in the United States. Second, CD4 and viral load test results reported to HIV surveillance programs were used for determining stage of disease and monitoring linkage to care and viral suppression; CD4 and viral load laboratory tests might not have been obtained at all care visits. Not having these tests performed among patients in care or unreported to surveillance systems limits the ability to monitor care outcomes. Finally, comparisons of numbers and percentages by area, sex, age group, and transmission category should be made cautiously because population subgroups vary in size and some have small numbers. Reported numbers ≤12 and their accompanying percentages are not discussed.

Early HIV diagnosis and treatment among Black persons with HIV infection are necessary to reduce disparities and achieve national prevention goals. For equitable health to be achieved for Black persons in all geographic areas, culturally appropriate and stigma-free sexual health care is needed, particularly among those who live in rural communities. Although 80% of Black persons with diagnosed HIV live in metropolitan areas, identifying geographic disparities is important to ensure HIV-related health equity. Disparities in care outcomes should be addressed and interventions prioritized that address social determinants of health.††

Corresponding author: Shacara Johnson Lyons, SJohnsonLyons@cdc.gov, 404-718-1149.


1Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, CDC; 2ICF, Atlanta, Georgia.

All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.


* CDC has established three criteria for complete laboratory reporting: 1) the jurisdiction’s laws or regulations require reporting of all CD4 and viral load results to the state or local health department; 2) laboratories that perform HIV-related testing for the area must have reported a minimum of 95% of HIV-related test results to the state or local health department; and 3) by December 31, 2019, the jurisdiction had reported to CDC ≥95% of all CD4 and viral load results received during January 2017–September 2019. https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance.html

The National HIV Surveillance System is the primary source for monitoring HIV trends in the United States. Through that system, CDC funds and assists state and local health departments for collecting data regarding HIV infection cases. Health departments provide deidentified data to CDC.

§ Area of residence at HIV diagnosis was categorized as rural (<50,000 population), urban (50,000–499,999 population), or metropolitan (≥500,000 population) according to the Office of Management and Budget 2010 standards for delineating metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas (http://www.federalregister.gov/documents/201006/28/2010-15605/2010-standards-for-delineating-metropolitan-and-micropolitan-statistical-areas).

Alabama, Alaska, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

** Disease stages are defined as follows: stage zero, the first positive HIV test result ≤6 months after a negative HIV test result and remaining at Stage zero until 6 months after the first positive test result; stage 1, a CD4 count of ≥500 cells/µL or CD4 percentage of ≥26; stage 2, a CD4 count of 200–499 cells/µL or CD4 percentage of 14–25; stage 3 (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS]), a CD4 count of <200 cells/µL or CD4 percentage of <14 or documentation of an AIDS-defining condition. Stages of disease are further classified as stage zero; stages 1–2: early-stage diagnosis; and stage 3 [AIDS]: late-stage diagnosis.

†† https://www.cdc.gov/socialdeterminants/docs/sdh-white-paper-2010.pdf

References

  1. CDC. Diagnoses of HIV infection in the United States and dependent areas, 2018. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2020. https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance/vol-31/index.html
  2. CDC. Monitoring selected national HIV prevention and care objectives by using HIV surveillance data—United States and 6 dependent areas, 2018. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2020. https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/pdf/library/reports/surveillance/cdc-hiv-surveillance-supplemental-report-vol-25-2.pdf
  3. Nelson JA, Kinder A, Johnson AS, et al. Differences in selected HIV care continuum outcomes among people residing in rural, urban, and metropolitan areas—28 US jurisdictions. J Rural Health 2018;34:63–70. https://doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12208 PMID:27620836
  4. Nwangwu-Ike N, Saduvala N, Watson M, Panneer N, Oster AM. HIV diagnoses and viral suppression among US women in rural and nonrural areas, 2010–2017. J Rural Health 2020;36:217–23. https://doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12384 PMID:31233645
  5. Office of National AIDS Policy. National HIV/AIDS strategy for the United States: updated to 2020. Washington, DC: Office of National AIDS Policy; 2015. https://www.hiv.gov/sites/default/files/nhas-2020-action-plan.pdf
  6. Fauci AS, Redfield RR, Sigounas G, Weahkee MD, Giroir BP. Ending the HIV epidemic: a plan for the United States. JAMA 2019;321:844–5. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2019.1343 PMID:30730529
  7. CDC. Revised surveillance case definition for HIV infection—United States, 2014. MMWR Recomm Rep 2014;63(No. RR-3):1–10.https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr6303.pdf PMID:24717910
  8. Harrison KM, Kajese T, Hall HI, Song R. Risk factor redistribution of the national HIV/AIDS surveillance data: an alternative approach. Public Health Rep 2008;123:618–27. https://doi.org/10.1177/003335490812300512 PMID:18828417
  9. US Department of Health and Human Services. America’s HIV epidemic analysis dashboard (AHEAD). Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2020. https://ahead.hiv.gov/
TABLE 1. Stage of disease at time of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) diagnosis during 2018 among Black or African American persons aged ≥13 years, by population of area of residence and selected characteristics — 41 states and the District of Columbia, 2018*Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Total no. No. (%)
Stage zero Stage 1
(CD4 ≥500 cells/µL or ≥ 26%)
Stage 2
(CD4 = 200–499 cells/µL or 14%–25%)
Stage 3 (AIDS)
(OI or CD4 <200 cells/µL or <14%)
Stage unknown§
Rural
Gender
Male 648 40 (6.2) 137 (21.1) 197 (30.4) 149 (23.0) 125 (19.3)
Female 242 8 (3.3) 70 (28.9) 58 (24.0) 76 (31.4) 30 (12.4)
Transgender 7 2 (28.6) 0 (—) 1 (14.3) 1 (14.3) 3 (42.9)
Age group at diagnosis, yrs
13–24 225 25 (11.1) 49 (21.8) 86 (38.2) 19 (8.4) 46 (20.4)
25–34 289 18 (6.2) 73 (25.3) 85 (29.4) 58 (20.1) 55 (19.0)
35–44 163 5 (3.1) 39 (23.9) 48 (29.4) 47 (28.8) 24 (14.7)
45–54 117 2 (1.7) 23 (19.7) 16 (13.7) 56 (47.9) 20 (17.1)
≥55 103 0 (—) 23 (22.3) 21 (20.4) 46 (44.7) 13 (12.6)
Transmission category**
Male-to-male sexual contact 489 38 (7.8) 95 (19.5) 164 (33.5) 94 (19.2) 98 (20.0)
Injection drug use
Male 33 0 (—) 12 (37.8) 3 (9.5) 11 (32.9) 6 (18.8)
Female 19 1 (2.6) 6 (32.0) 5 (23.7) 7 (35.1) 1 (6.7)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 14 1 (8.4) 5 (32.9) 2 (15.4) 1 (9.1) 5 (34.3)
Heterosexual contact††
Male 118 2 (1.3) 24 (20.5) 29 (24.7) 44 (37.2) 19 (16.4)
Female 222 9 (3.8) 64 (28.7) 52 (23.6) 69 (30.9) 29 (12.9)
Total§§ 897 50 (5.6) 207 (23.1) 256 (28.5) 226 (25.2) 158 (17.6)
Urban
Gender
Male 1,399 77 (5.5) 300 (21.4) 448 (32.0) 301 (21.5) 273 (19.5)
Female 502 15 (3.0) 143 (28.5) 154 (30.7) 116 (23.1) 74 (14.7)
Transgender 19 3 (15.8) 4 (21.1) 9 (47.4) 3 (15.8) 0 (—)
Age group at diagnosis, yrs
13–24 575 48 (8.3) 137 (23.8) 209 (36.3) 52 (9.0) 129 (22.4)
25–34 651 29 (4.5) 169 (26.0) 218 (33.5) 129 (19.8) 106 (16.3)
35–44 323 8 (2.5) 79 (24.5) 89 (27.6) 96 (29.7) 51 (15.8)
45–54 211 8 (3.8) 34 (16.1) 57 (27.0) 74 (35.1) 38 (18.0)
≥55 160 2 (1.3) 28 (17.5) 38 (23.8) 69 (43.1) 23 (14.4)
Transmission category**
Male-to-male sexual contact 1,121 68 (6.1) 254 (22.6) 370 (33.0) 218 (19.5) 211 (18.8)
Injection drug use
Male 45 2 (4.0) 9 (19.7) 13 (28.7) 10 (21.5) 12 (26.0)
Female 36 1 (3.6) 9 (26.2) 6 (16.7) 10 (28.4) 9 (25.1)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 28 1 (4.7) 7 (25.4) 8 (29.7) 4 (15.6) 7 (24.6)
Heterosexual contact††
Male 221 8 (3.4) 32 (14.5) 66 (29.8) 72 (32.5) 44 (19.8)
Female 464 15 (3.2) 134 (28.7) 147 (31.6) 105 (22.7) 64 (13.8)
Total§§ 1,920 95 (4.9) 447 (23.3) 611 (31.8) 420 (21.9) 347 (18.1)
Metropolitan
Gender
Male 8,502 619 (7.3) 1,979 (23.3) 2,647 (31.1) 1,584 (18.6) 1,673 (19.7)
Female 2,941 119 (4.0) 912 (31.0) 817 (27.8) 606 (20.6) 487 (16.6)
Transgender 242 24 (9.9) 78 (32.2) 74 (30.6) 29 (12.0) 37 (15.3)
Age group at diagnosis, yrs
13–24 2,916 292 (10.0) 760 (26.1) 1,029 (35.3) 273 (9.4) 562 (19.3)
25–34 4,172 294 (7.0) 1,129 (27.1) 1,289 (30.9) 667 (16.0) 793 (19.0)
35–44 1,980 83 (4.2) 492 (24.8) 563 (28.4) 469 (23.7) 373 (18.8)
45–54 1,444 56 (3.9) 309 (21.4) 351 (24.3) 453 (31.4) 275 (19.0)
≥55 1,173 37 (3.2) 279 (23.8) 306 (26.1) 357 (30.4) 194 (16.5)
Transmission category**
Male-to-male sexual contact 6,998 567 (8.1) 1,702 (24.3) 2,225 (31.8) 1,157 (16.5) 1,347 (19.2)
Injection drug use
Male 283 16 (5.6) 64 (22.4) 73 (25.6) 69 (24.4) 62 (21.9)
Female 214 10 (4.5) 58 (27.1) 55 (25.5) 50 (23.2) 42 (19.7)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 195 14 (7.4) 51 (26.3) 52 (26.8) 34 (17.2) 44 (22.3)
Heterosexual contact††
Male 1,244 44 (3.6) 233 (18.7) 363 (29.2) 352 (28.3) 252 (20.3)
Female 2,722 110 (4.1) 854 (31.4) 762 (28.0) 551 (20.2) 445 (16.4)
Total§§ 11,685 762 (6.5) 2,969 (25.4) 3,538 (30.3) 2,219 (19.0) 2,197 (18.8)

Abbreviations: CD4 = CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; OI = opportunistic infection (i.e., AIDS-defining condition).
* Stage of disease at diagnosis of HIV infection based on first CD4 test performed or documentation of an AIDS-defining condition ≤3 months after a diagnosis of HIV infection. Data are based on residence at time of diagnosis. 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 laws: Idaho, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Areas with incomplete reporting: Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Kansas, Kentucky, Vermont, and Puerto Rico.
First positive HIV test result is within 6 months after a negative HIV test result. The diagnosis of an AIDS-defining condition or a low CD4 test result before the 6 months have elapsed does not change the stage from stage zero to stage 3.
§ Includes persons with no CD4 information.
Transgender includes persons who identified as transgender male-to-female, transgender female-to-male, and additional gender identity. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful. “Transgender male-to-female” includes persons who were assigned "male" sex at birth but have ever identified as "female" gender. "Transgender female-to-male" includes persons who were assigned "female" sex at birth but have ever identified as "male" gender. Additional gender identity examples include "bigender," "gender queer," and "two-spirit.”
** Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category; therefore, values might not sum to column subtotals and total. Data presented based on sex at birth and include transgender persons.
†† Heterosexual contact with a person known to have, or to be at high risk for, HIV infection.
§§ Includes persons whose infection was attributed to hemophilia, blood transfusion, or perinatal exposure, or whose risk factor was not reported or not identified. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful.

TABLE 2. Linkage to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) medical care within 1 month of HIV diagnosis among Black or African American persons aged ≥13 years with HIV infection diagnosed during 2018, by population area of residence, age group, and selected characteristics — 41 states and the District of Columbia, 2018*Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Age 13–24 yrs Age 25–34 yrs Age 35–44 yrs Age 45–54 yrs Age ≥55 yrs Total
No. No. linked (%) No. No. linked (%) No. No. linked (%) No. No. linked (%) No. No. linked (%) No. No. linked (%)
Rural
Gender
Male 187 136 (72.7) 225 166 (73.8) 101 80 (79.2) 73 53 (72.6) 62 52 (83.9) 648 487 (75.2)
Female 36 29 (80.6) 61 45 (73.8) 60 53 (88.3) 44 33 (75.0) 41 38 (92.7) 242 198 (81.8)
Transgender 2 1 (50.0) 3 3 (100) 2 0 (—) 0 0 (—) 0 0 (—) 7 3 (42.9)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 177 128 (72.4) 185 138 (74.4) 63 49 (78.1) 41 30 (72.9) 22 18 (82.4) 489 364 (74.4)
Injection drug use
Male 1 1 (75.0) 7 7 (89.3) 13 9 (74.8) 7 6 (82.6) 5 5 (100) 33 27 (81.8)
Female 2 2 (95.8) 4 3 (79.5) 4 4 (94.9) 4 4 (87.8) 5 5 (92.2) 19 17 (89.5)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 2 1 (41.7) 6 2 (37.3) 4 3 (86.1) 1 1 (54.5) 1 1 (92.3) 14 8 (57.1)
Heterosexual contact
Male 9 7 (83.1) 28 21 (75.1) 24 18 (76.7) 24 17 (69.9) 33 28 (82.3) 118 91 (77.1)
Female 34 27 (79.4) 57 41 (71.5) 56 49 (87.8) 40 29 (73.7) 36 33 (92.8) 222 179 (80.6)
Total** 225 166 (73.8) 289 213 (73.7) 163 133 (81.6) 117 86 (73.5) 103 90 (87.4) 897 688 (76.7)
Urban
Gender
Male 482 347 (72.0) 492 361 (73.4) 192 155 (80.7) 135 102 (75.6) 98 84 (85.7) 1,399 1,049 (75.0)
Female 87 68 (78.2) 147 117 (79.6) 130 114 (87.7) 76 67 (88.2) 62 49 (79.0) 502 415 (82.7)
Transgender 6 5 (83.3) 12 10 (90.9) 1 0 (—) 0 0 (—) 0 0 (—) 19 15 (78.9)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 454 329 (72.4) 421 311 (73.9) 126 102 (80.7) 76 62 (81.7) 45 40 (88.7) 1,121 843 (75.2)
Injection drug use
Male 4 2 (55.0) 9 5 (52.2) 12 8 (66.1) 10 6 (66.0) 9 7 (77.4) 45 29 (64.4)
Female 6 4 (64.9) 6 5 (83.9) 10 8 (75.8) 7 6 (90.1) 8 6 (78.9) 36 28 (77.8)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 6 4 (64.9) 9 7 (76.1) 5 3 (66.7) 6 4 (73.2) 2 1 (75.0) 28 20 (71.4)
Heterosexual contact
Male 22 15 (67.7) 64 47 (74.0) 50 42 (84.0) 44 29 (67.1) 42 36 (84.7) 221 168 (76.0)
Female 80 63 (79.0) 142 113 (79.6) 120 106 (88.7) 69 61 (88.0) 54 43 (79.0) 464 386 (83.2)
Total** 575 420 (73.0) 651 488 (75.0) 323 269 (83.3) 211 169 (80.1) 160 133 (83.1) 1,920 1,479 (77.0)
Metropolitan
Gender
Male 2,409 1,833 (76.1) 3,328 2,535 (76.2) 1,256 976 (77.7) 857 637 (74.3) 652 511 (78.4) 8,502 6,492 (76.4)
Female 412 315 (76.5) 736 579 (78.7) 692 552 (79.8) 581 460 (79.2) 520 431 (82.9) 2,941 2,337 (79.5)
Transgender 95 74 (77.9) 108 81 (80.2) 32 29 (90.6) 6 5 (83.3) 1 1 (100) 242 195 (80.6)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 2,339 0 (—) 2,941 2,261 (76.9) 921 722 (78.4) 509 374 (73.4) 288 224 (77.7) 6,998 5,379 (76.9)
Injection drug use
Male 20 13 (63.6) 61 44 (71.5) 62 48 (76.6) 62 45 (71.9) 78 63 (80.1) 283 211 (74.5)
Female 18 14 (78.3) 49 34 (69.0) 45 32 (72.3) 45 35 (77.9) 56 46 (81.1) 214 162 (75.7)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 37 29 (77.5) 92 71 (76.8) 33 23 (71.8) 20 15 (77.3) 14 10 (76.5) 195 149 (76.4)
Heterosexual contact
Male 102 64 (62.3) 333 240 (72.0) 268 208 (77.5) 271 208 (76.8) 270 212 (78.7) 1,244 931 (74.9)
Female 386 292 (75.7) 688 545 (79.2) 649 522 (80.4) 535 424 (79.3) 463 385 (83.1) 2,722 2,168 (79.6)
Total** 2,916 2,222 (76.2) 4,172 3,200 (76.7) 1,980 1,557 (78.6) 1,444 1,102 (76.3) 1,173 943 (80.4) 11,685 9,024 (77.2)

Abbreviations: CD4 = CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; OI = opportunistic infection (i.e., AIDS-defining condition).
* Linkage to HIV medical care was measured by documentation of ≥1 CD4 or VL tests ≤1 month or ≤3 months of HIV diagnosis. Data are based on residence at time of diagnosis. 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 laws: Idaho, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Areas with incomplete reporting: Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Kansas, Kentucky, Vermont, and Puerto Rico.
Transgender includes persons who identified as transgender male-to-female, transgender female-to-male, and additional gender identity. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful. “Transgender male-to-female” includes persons who were assigned "male" sex at birth but have ever identified as "female" gender. "Transgender female-to-male" includes persons who were assigned "female" sex at birth but have ever identified as "male" gender. Additional gender identity examples include "bigender," "gender queer," and "two-spirit.”
§ Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category; therefore, values might not sum to column subtotals and total. Data presented based on sex at birth and include transgender persons.
Heterosexual contact with a person known to have, or to be at high risk for, HIV infection.
** Includes persons whose infection was attributed to hemophilia, blood transfusion, perinatal exposure, or whose risk factor was not reported or not identified. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful.

TABLE 3. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) viral suppression within 6 months among Black or African American persons aged ≥13 years with HIV infection diagnosed during 2018, by population area of residence, age group, and selected characteristics — 41 states and the District of Columbia, 2018*Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Age ≥13 yrs Age 13–24 yrs Age 25–34 yrs Age 35–44 yrs Age 45–54 yrs Age ≥55 yrs
No. Suppressed
no. (%)
No. Suppressed
no. (%)
No. Suppressed no. (%) No. Suppressed
no. (%)
No. Suppressed
no. (%)
No. Suppressed
no (%)
Rural
Gender
Male 648 376 (58.0) 187 118 (63.1) 225 132 (58.7) 101 61 (60.4) 73 33 (45.2) 62 32 (51.6)
Female 242 155 (64.0) 36 22 (61.1) 61 33 (54.1) 60 42 (70.0) 44 28 (63.6) 41 30 (73.2)
Transgender 7 4 (57.1) 2 0 (—) 3 2 (66.7) 2 2 (100) 0 0 (—) 0 0 (—)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 489 282 (57.6) 177 110 (62.0) 185 111 (60.0) 63 33 (52.3) 41 18 (44.2) 22 10 (43.4)
Injection drug use
Male 33 18 (55.1) 1 1 (75.0) 7 4 (48.0) 13 10 (75.6) 7 2 (31.9) 5 2 (41.3)
Female 19 12 (60.8) 2 2 (79.2) 4 2 (51.3) 4 3 (79.6) 4 3 (61.0) 5 2 (45.1)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 14 9 (61.5) 2 1 (29.2) 6 4 (62.7) 4 3 (75.0) 1 0 (—) 1 1 (100)
Heterosexual contact
Male 118 71 (60.5) 9 7 (79.8) 28 15 (54.4) 24 18 (75.0) 24 12 (51.3) 33 19 (56.6)
Female 222 142 (63.8) 34 20 (79.2) 57 30 (52.2) 56 39 (69.2) 40 26 (63.9) 36 28 (77.2)
Total** 897 535 (59.6) 225 140 (62.2) 289 167 (57.8) 163 105 (64.4) 117 61 (52.1) 103 62 (60.2)
Urban
Gender
Male 1,399 808 (57.8) 482 275 (57.1) 492 286 (58.1) 192 118 (61.5) 135 73 (54.1) 98 56 (57.1)
Female 502 327 (65.1) 87 56 (64.4) 147 99 (67.3) 130 88 (67.7) 76 46 (60.5) 62 38 (61.3)
Transgender 19 11 (57.9) 6 4 (66.7) 12 7 (58.3) 1 0 (—) 0 0 (—) 0 0 (—)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 1,121 662 (59.1) 454 259 (57.2) 421 250 (59.5) 126 82 (65.3) 76 44 (58.0) 45 26 (58.1)
Injection drug use
Male 45 22 (48.9) 4 2 (45.0) 9 3 (29.3) 12 6 (51.6) 10 7 (67.0) 9 4 (47.3)
Female 36 20 (56.0) 6 4 (73.7) 6 4 (67.9) 10 6 (56.6) 7 3 (47.9) 8 3 (40.8)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 28 14 (50.0) 6 4 (56.3) 9 5 (51.1) 5 1 (16.7) 6 4 (67.9) 2 1 (56.3)
Heterosexual contact
Male 221 118 (53.3) 22 12 (55.3) 64 34 (53.6) 50 29 (57.1) 44 19 (42.5) 42 24 (58.2)
Female 464 307 (66.0) 80 52 (64.7) 142 95 (67.4) 120 82 (68.6) 69 43 (61.8) 54 35 (64.1)
Total** 1,920 1,146 (59.7) 575 335 (58.3) 651 392 (60.2) 323 206 (63.8) 211 119 (56.4) 160 94 (58.8)
Metropolitan
Gender
Male 8,502 5,301 (62.4) 2,409 1,503 (62.4) 3,328 2,067 (62.1) 1,256 796 (63.4) 857 534 (62.3) 652 401 (61.5)
Female 2,941 2,003 (68.1) 412 267 (64.8) 736 483 (65.6) 692 486 (70.2) 581 410 (70.6) 520 357 (68.7)
Transgender 242 147 (60.7) 95 56 (58.9) 108 58 (53.7) 32 26 (81.3) 6 3 (50.0) 1 1 (100)
Transmission category§
Male-to-male sexual contact 6,998 4,420 (63.2) 2,339 1,474 (63.0) 2,941 1,856 (63.1) 921 595 (64.6) 509 315 (62.0) 288 180 (62.3)
Injection drug use
Male 283 146 (51.5) 20 7 (37.4) 61 28 (45.0) 62 32 (52.1) 62 31 (50.0) 78 47 (60.8)
Female 214 124 (58.0) 18 11 (61.4) 49 23 (47.5) 45 25 (54.9) 45 30 (65.3) 56 35 (62.8)
Male-to-male sexual contact and injection drug use 195 112 (57.4) 37 21 (55.5) 92 53 (57.8) 33 17 (52.1) 20 11 (57.1) 14 10 (72.8)
Heterosexual contact
Male 1,244 756 (60.8) 102 53 (51.7) 333 188 (56.4) 268 174 (64.8) 271 179 (66.1) 270 163 (60.4)
Female 2,722 1,873 (68.8) 386 248 (64.4) 688 459 (66.7) 649 464 (71.4) 535 380 (71.0) 463 322 (69.4)
Total** 11,685 7,451 (63.8) 2,916 1,826 (62.6) 4,172 2,611 (62.6) 1,980 1,308 (66.1) 1,444 947 (65.6) 1,173 759 (64.7)

Abbreviations: CD4 = CD4+ T-lymphocyte count (cells/µL) or percentage; OI = opportunistic infection (i.e., AIDS-defining condition); VL = viral load.
* VL test result of <200 copies/ml indicates HIV viral suppression. VL test results are within 6 months of diagnosis of HIV infection during 2018. Data are based on residence at time of diagnosis. Data not provided for states and associated counties that do not have laws requiring reporting of all CD4 and VLs, or that have incomplete reporting of laboratory data to CDC. Areas without laws: Idaho, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Areas with incomplete reporting: Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Kansas, Kentucky, Vermont, and Puerto Rico.
Transgender includes persons who identified as transgender male-to-female, transgender female-to-male, and additional gender identity. Data not displayed because the numbers were too small to be meaningful. “Transgender male-to-female” includes persons who were assigned "male" sex at birth but have ever identified as "female" gender. "Transgender female-to-male" includes persons who were assigned "female" sex at birth but have ever identified as "male" gender. Additional gender identity examples include "bigender," "gender queer," and "two-spirit.”
§ Data have been statistically adjusted to account for missing transmission category; therefore, values might not sum to column subtotals and total. Data presented based on sex at birth and include transgender persons.
Heterosexual contact with a person known to have, or to be at high risk for, HIV infection.


Suggested citation for this article: Lyons SJ, Dailey AF, Yu C, Johnson AS. Care Outcomes Among Black or African American Persons with Diagnosed HIV in Rural, Urban, and Metropolitan Statistical Areas — 42 U.S. Jurisdictions, 2018. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2021;70:229–235. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7007a1.

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