ATW1H%ASUACAD.BITNET@oac.ucla.edu (Dr David Dodell) (06/21/89)
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Hawaii 81 7.3 112 9.9
Idaho 10 1.0 18 1.7
Illinois 795 6.9 1,027 8.9
Indiana 176 3.2 187 3.4
Iowa 29 1.0 56 2.0
Kansas 67 2.7 95 3.8
Kentucky 70 1.9 100 2.7
Louisiana 402 8.8 423 9.2
Maine 32 2.7 44 3.7
Maryland 479 10.7 645 14.3
Massachusetts 542 9.2 710 12.1
Michigan 317 3.5 450 5.0
Minnesota 134 3.2 176 4.1
Mississippi 96 3.6 149 5.6
Missouri 320 6.3 406 8.0
Montana 13 1.6 12 1.4
Nebraska 31 1.9 46 2.8
Nevada 115 11.7 150 14.9
New Hampshire 39 3.8 39 3.7
New Jersey 2,120 27.7 2,390 31.1
New Mexico 54 3.6 68 4.4
New York 5,440 30.4 6,637 37.0
North Carolina 293 4.6 307 4.7
North Dakota _ . 6 0.9
Ohio 456 4.2 491 4.6
Oklahoma 146 4.4 152 4.5
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Oregon 189 7.0 195 7.2
Pennsylvania 813 6.9 992 8.4
Rhode Island 67 6.8 93 9.5
South Carolina 123 3.6 219 6.3
South Dakota 4 0.6 8 1.1
Tennessee 246 5.1 267 5.5
Texas 1,984 11.6 2,433 14.0
Utah 61 3.6 73 4.2
Vermont 15 2.8 14 2.6
Virginia 299 5.1 428 7.2
Washington 413 9.1 454 9.9
West Virginia 19 1.0 34 1.8
Wisconsin 103 2.1 123 2.6
Wyoming 1 0.2 14 2.7
U.S. total 26,640 11.0 32,155 13.1
Guam 3 2.3 2 1.5
Pacific Islands, Trust Territory _ . 1 0.7
Puerto Rico 838 25.5 1,279 38.8
Virgin Islands, U.S. 9 8.1 41 36.2
Total 27,490 11.2 33,478 13.4
Table 1. AIDS cases and annual incidence rates per 100,000 population,
by state, reported June 1987 through May 1988 and June 1988
through May 1989; and cumulative totals, by state and age group,
through May 1989
Cumulative totals
Adults/ Children
STATE OF RESIDENCE adolescents <13 years old Total
Alabama 518 14 532
Alaska 61 1 62
Arizona 771 4 775
Arkansas 199 3 202
California 19,233 134 19,367
Colorado 1,009 5 1,014
Connecticut 1,167 40 1,207
Delaware 178 4 182
District of Columbia 1,712 21 1,733
Florida 7,613 212 7,825
Georgia 2,280 33 2,313
Hawaii 336 2 338
Idaho 36 2 38
Illinois 2,722 39 2,761
Indiana 519 4 523
Iowa 129 3 132
Kansas 234 3 237
Kentucky 246 3 249
Louisiana 1,249 18 1,267
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Maine 119 2 121
Maryland 1,670 38 1,708
Massachusetts 1,976 33 2,009
Michigan 1,093 19 1,112
Minnesota 509 4 513
Mississippi 288 6 294
Missouri 953 8 961
Montana 30 _ 30
Nebraska 106 1 107
Nevada 345 3 348
New Hampshire 104 4 108
New Jersey 6,465 194 6,659
New Mexico 175 1 176
New York 22,276 490 22,766
North Carolina 802 18 820
North Dakota 13 _ 13
Ohio 1,305 21 1,326
Oklahoma 402 9 411
Oregon 554 3 557
Pennsylvania 2,605 46 2,651
Rhode Island 230 6 236
South Carolina 475 15 490
South Dakota 16 _ 16
Tennessee 602 10 612
Texas 6,660 54 6,714
Utah 188 5 193
Vermont 42 1 43
Virginia 1,130 22 1,152
Washington 1,301 8 1,309
West Virginia 78 2 80
Wisconsin 338 1 339
Wyoming 20 _ 20
U.S. total 93,082 1,569 94,651
Guam 6 _ 6
Pacific Islands, Trust Territory 1 _ 1
Puerto Rico 2,417 61 2,478
Virgin Islands, U.S. 55 2 57
Total 95,561 1,632 97,193
Table 2. AIDS cases and annual incidence rates per 100,000 population,
by metropolitan area with 500,000 or more population, reported
June 1987 through May 1988 and June 1988 through May 1989;
and cumulative totals, by area and age group, through May 1989
June 1987- June 1988-
METROPOLITAN May 1988 May 1989
AREA OF RESIDENCE No. Rate No. Rate
Akron, Ohio 19 3.0 31 4.9
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Albany-Schenectady, N.Y. 54 6.4 61 7.2
Allentown, Pa. 16 2.4 36 5.5
Anaheim, Calif. 263 12.0 249 11.2
Atlanta, Ga. 454 17.3 695 25.8
Austin, Tex. 83 10.7 148 18.4
Bakersfield, Calif. 20 3.9 20 3.8
Baltimore, Md. 252 11.1 398 17.4
Baton Rouge, La. 25 4.5 47 8.2
Bergen-Passaic, N.J. 282 21.6 264 20.2
Birmingham, Ala. 56 6.1 80 8.7
Boston, Mass. 421 11.3 570 15.2
Bridgeport, Conn. 98 11.8 140 16.8
Buffalo, N.Y. 43 4.5 44 4.6
Charleston, S.C. 28 5.5 43 8.4
Charlotte, N.C. 78 7.2 68 6.2
Chicago, Ill. 678 10.9 869 13.9
Cincinnati, Ohio 73 5.1 60 4.2
Cleveland, Ohio 132 7.1 110 6.0
Columbus, Ohio 94 7.2 132 10.0
Dallas, Tex. 530 21.5 577 22.8
Dayton, Ohio 35 3.8 52 5.6
Denver, Colo. 237 14.2 288 16.9
Detroit, Mich. 230 5.4 317 7.4
El Paso, Tex. 20 3.6 13 2.3
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 355 30.4 480 40.4
Fort Worth, Tex. 99 7.7 163 12.2
Fresno, Calif. 32 5.3 48 7.7
Gary, Ind. 15 2.4 14 2.3
Grand Rapids, Mich. 12 1.8 28 4.2
Greensboro, N.C. 42 4.6 46 5.0
Greenville, S.C. 17 2.8 23 3.7
Harrisburg, Pa. 30 5.2 48 8.3
Hartford, Conn. 92 8.5 128 11.8
Honolulu, Hawaii 63 7.4 95 11.0
Houston, Tex. 968 29.0 860 25.2
Indianapolis, Ind. 74 6.1 81 6.6
Jacksonville, Fla. 144 16.6 145 16.3
Jersey City, N.J. 358 64.3 421 75.7
Kansas City, Mo. 178 11.7 227 14.8
Knoxville, Tenn. 24 4.0 28 4.6
Las Vegas, Nev. 94 16.0 105 17.3
Little Rock, Ark. 29 5.7 28 5.4
Los Angeles, Calif. 1,767 21.2 1,913 22.6
Louisville, Ky. 36 3.7 44 4.5
Memphis, Tenn. 87 9.1 76 7.9
Miami, Fla. 473 26.4 858 47.5
Middlesex, N.J. 153 16.1 212 22.1
Milwaukee, Wis. 59 4.3 74 5.4
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minn. 119 5.1 153 6.5
Monmouth-Ocean City, N.J. 125 13.1 161 16.6
Nashville, Tenn. 78 8.3 97 10.2
Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. 295 11.1 340 12.7
New Haven, Conn. 126 16.1 118 15.0
New Orleans, La. 264 19.7 252 18.7
New York, N.Y. 4,620 54.2 5,733 67.0
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Newark, N.J. 961 51.1 994 52.9
Norfolk, Va. 83 6.2 92 6.7
Oakland, Calif. 378 19.2 350 17.5
Oklahoma City, Okla. 50 5.0 18 1.8
Omaha, Neb. 22 3.5 32 5.1
Orlando, Fla. 93 10.0 195 20.2
Oxnard-Ventura, Calif. 27 4.3 46 7.2
Philadelphia, Pa. 636 13.2 725 15.0
Phoenix, Ariz. 236 11.8 191 9.2
Pittsburgh, Pa. 102 4.9 118 5.7
Portland, Oreg. 149 12.8 154 13.1
Providence, R.I. 59 6.6 83 9.3
Raleigh-Durham, N.C. 56 8.4 67 9.8
Richmond, Va. 47 5.7 93 11.3
Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif. 224 10.9 199 9.3
Rochester, N.Y. 77 7.8 74 7.5
Sacramento, Calif. 148 11.2 172 12.7
Saint Louis, Mo. 130 5.3 182 7.5
Salt Lake City, Utah 51 4.8 62 5.7
San Antonio, Tex. 42 3.2 325 24.5
San Diego, Calif. 422 18.8 445 19.3
San Francisco, Calif. 1,861 114.3 1,676 101.8
San Jose, Calif. 161 11.2 147 10.0
San Juan, P.R. 427 38.3 823 73.5
Scranton, Pa. 21 2.9 19 2.6
Seattle, Wash. 305 17.1 341 18.9
Springfield, Mass. 20 3.4 42 7.2
Syracuse, N.Y. 22 3.3 21 3.2
Tacoma, Wash. 29 5.4 27 5.0
Tampa, Fla. 238 12.1 496 24.7
Toledo, Ohio 20 3.3 21 3.5
Tucson, Ariz. 52 8.6 52 8.4
Tulsa, Okla. 44 5.9 48 6.3
Washington, D.C. 802 22.3 892 24.5
West Palm Beach, Fla. 232 29.8 347 43.1
Wilmington, Del. 35 6.3 70 12.5
Worcester, Mass. 36 5.4 36 5.4
Youngstown, Ohio 12 2.4 18 3.6
Metropolitan area subtotal* 23,359 16.5 28,004 19.6
Non-metropolitan areas 4,131 3.9 5,474 5.1
Total 27,490 11.1 33,478 13.4
* Includes data from all metropolitan areas with 50,000 or more
population.
Table 2. AIDS cases and annual incidence rates per 100,000 population,
by metropolitan area with 500,000 or more population, reported
June 1987 through May 1988 and June 1988 through May 1989;
and cumulative totals, by area and age group, through May 1989
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Cumulative totals
METROPOLITAN Adults/ Children
AREA OF RESIDENCE adolescents <13 years old Total
Akron, Ohio 66 _ 66
Albany-Schenectady, N.Y. 197 1 198
Allentown, Pa. 79 3 82
Anaheim, Calif. 761 8 769
Atlanta, Ga. 1,728 18 1,746
Austin, Tex. 355 4 359
Bakersfield, Calif. 52 _ 52
Baltimore, Md. 904 27 931
Baton Rouge, La. 107 _ 107
Bergen-Passaic, N.J. 858 24 882
Birmingham, Ala. 164 6 170
Boston, Mass. 1,586 26 1,612
Bridgeport, Conn. 343 12 355
Buffalo, N.Y. 131 _ 131
Charleston, S.C. 107 _ 107
Charlotte, N.C. 178 4 182
Chicago, Ill. 2,317 28 2,345
Cincinnati, Ohio 177 3 180
Cleveland, Ohio 349 5 354
Columbus, Ohio 303 1 304
Dallas, Tex. 1,671 6 1,677
Dayton, Ohio 125 3 128
Denver, Colo. 825 3 828
Detroit, Mich. 772 14 786
El Paso, Tex. 46 _ 46
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 1,257 19 1,276
Fort Worth, Tex. 357 1 358
Fresno, Calif. 102 1 103
Gary, Ind. 43 _ 43
Grand Rapids, Mich. 56 1 57
Greensboro, N.C. 116 3 119
Greenville, S.C. 61 _ 61
Harrisburg, Pa. 102 2 104
Hartford, Conn. 309 7 316
Honolulu, Hawaii 279 1 280
Houston, Tex. 2,917 24 2,941
Indianapolis, Ind. 217 1 218
Jacksonville, Fla. 338 9 347
Jersey City, N.J. 1,173 31 1,204
Kansas City, Mo. 525 3 528
Knoxville, Tenn. 69 _ 69
Las Vegas, Nev. 247 3 250
Little Rock, Ark. 83 1 84
Los Angeles, Calif. 6,753 57 6,810
Louisville, Ky. 108 1 109
Memphis, Tenn. 193 4 197
Miami, Fla. 2,344 100 2,444
Middlesex, N.J. 520 18 538
Milwaukee, Wis. 197 _ 197
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minn. 439 3 442
Monmouth-Ocean City, N.J. 355 13 368
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Nashville, Tenn. 202 4 206
Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. 1,052 34 1,086
New Haven, Conn. 371 21 392
New Orleans, La. 823 12 835
New York, N.Y. 19,478 441 19,919
Newark, N.J. 2,736 89 2,825
Norfolk, Va. 231 6 237
Oakland, Calif. 1,157 5 1,162
Oklahoma City, Okla. 134 _ 134
Omaha, Neb. 74 _ 74
Orlando, Fla. 378 4 382
Oxnard-Ventura, Calif. 92 _ 92
Philadelphia, Pa. 2,006 29 2,035
Phoenix, Ariz. 560 2 562
Pittsburgh, Pa. 320 1 321
Portland, Oreg. 441 1 442
Providence, R.I. 199 5 204
Raleigh-Durham, N.C. 172 4 176
Richmond, Va. 216 1 217
Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif. 568 12 580
Rochester, N.Y. 229 1 230
Sacramento, Calif. 403 5 408
Saint Louis, Mo. 419 5 424
Salt Lake City, Utah 165 4 169
San Antonio, Tex. 458 7 465
San Diego, Calif. 1,285 10 1,295
San Francisco, Calif. 6,367 9 6,376
San Jose, Calif. 456 5 461
San Juan, P.R. 1,458 46 1,504
Scranton, Pa. 62 2 64
Seattle, Wash. 990 7 997
Springfield, Mass. 97 1 98
Syracuse, N.Y. 87 4 91
Tacoma, Wash. 78 1 79
Tampa, Fla. 914 16 930
Toledo, Ohio 57 1 58
Tucson, Ariz. 151 2 153
Tulsa, Okla. 117 2 119
Washington, D.C. 2,761 38 2,799
West Palm Beach, Fla. 838 32 870
Wilmington, Del. 141 3 144
Worcester, Mass. 100 2 102
Youngstown, Ohio 41 _ 41
Metropolitan area subtotal* 82,245 1,373 83,618
Non-metropolitan areas 13,316 259 13,575
Total 95,561 1,632 97,193
* Includes data from all metropolitan areas with 50,000 or more
population.
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
Table 3. AIDS cases by age group, exposure category, and sex,
reported June 1987 through May 1988 and June 1988 through
May 1989; and cumulative totals, by age group and exposure
category, through May 1989, United States
Males
June 1987- June 1988-
ADULT/ADOLESCENT May 1988 May 1989
EXPOSURE CATEGORY No. (%) No. (%)
Male homosexual/bisexual contact 16,196 ( 66) 18,684 ( 64)
Intravenous (IV) drug use
(female and heterosexual male) 4,418 ( 18) 5,867 ( 20)
Male homosexual/bisexual contact
and IV drug use 1,962 ( 8) 2,069 ( 7)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 267 ( 1) 298 ( 1)
Heterosexual contact: 476 ( 2) 659 ( 2)
Sex with IV drug user 146 307
Sex with bisexual male _ _
Sex with person with hemophilia 1 2
Born in Pattern-II* country 260 246
Sex with person born in
Pattern-II country 17 14
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 5 8
Sex with person with HIV
infection, risk not specified 47 82
Receipt of transfusion of blood,
blood components, or tissue** 524 ( 2) 467 ( 2)
Other/undetermined*** 651 ( 3) 1,374 ( 5)
Adult/adolescent subtotal 24,494 (100) 29,418 (100)
PEDIATRIC (<13 years old)
EXPOSURE CATEGORY
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 28 ( 11) 35 ( 11)
Mother with/at risk for AIDS/
HIV infection: 188 ( 72) 246 ( 74)
IV drug use 95 125
Sex with IV drug user 42 52
Sex with bisexual male 1 6
Sex with person with hemophilia 3 _
Born in Pattern-II country 20 27
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 1 1
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection _ 3
Sex with person with HIV
infection, risk not specified 8 12
Receipt of transfusion of blood,
blood components, or tissue 3 1
Has HIV infection, risk not
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
specified 15 19
Receipt of transfusion of blood,
blood components, or tissue 40 ( 15) 35 ( 11)
Undetermined 6 ( 2) 17 ( 5)
Pediatric subtotal 262 (100) 333 (100)
TOTAL 24,756 29,751
* See technical notes.
** Includes 1 tissue recipient and 2 transfusion recipients who received
blood screened for HIV antibody.
*** "Other" is 1 health-care worker who seroconverted to HIV and developed
AIDS after needlestick exposure to HIV-infected blood. "Undetermined"
includes 2,313 adults/adolescents ( 49 children) under investigation;
563 adults/adolescents ( 7 children) who died, were lost to follow-up,
or refused interview; and 371 adults/adolescents ( 0 children) whose
mode of exposure to HIV remains undetermined after investigation.
Table 3. AIDS cases by age group, exposure category, and sex,
reported June 1987 through May 1988 and June 1988 through
May 1989; and cumulative totals, by age group and exposure
category, through May 1989, United States
Females
June 1987- June 1988-
ADULT/ADOLESCENT May 1988 May 1989
EXPOSURE CATEGORY No. (%) No. (%)
Male homosexual/bisexual contact
Intravenous (IV) drug use
(female and heterosexual male) 1,348 ( 54) 1,789 ( 52)
Male homosexual/bisexual contact
and IV drug use _ ( .) _ ( .)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 6 ( 0) 8 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 721 ( 29) 1,016 ( 30)
Sex with IV drug user 453 641
Sex with bisexual male 90 79
Sex with person with hemophilia 15 10
Born in Pattern-II* country 81 133
Sex with person born in
Pattern-II country 7 6
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 16 21
Sex with person with HIV
infection, risk not specified 59 126
Receipt of transfusion of blood,
blood components, or tissue** 283 ( 11) 329 ( 10)
Other/undetermined*** 156 ( 6) 300 ( 9)
Adult/adolescent subtotal 2,514 (100) 3,442 (100)
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Volume 2, Number 25 June 20, 1989
PEDIATRIC (<13 years old)
EXPOSURE CATEGORY
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder _ ( .) 1 ( 0)
Mother with/at risk for AIDS/
HIV infection: 183 ( 83) 254 ( 89)
IV drug use 99 116
Sex with IV drug user 33 51
Sex with bisexual male 8 5
Sex with person with hemophilia 2 1
Born in Pattern-II country 16 27
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country _ 2
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 4
Sex with person with HIV
infection, risk not specified 3 13
Receipt of transfusion of blood,
blood components, or tissue 8 7
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