1 / 31

Descriptive Epidemiology of HIV/AIDS: Counting & Surveillance

This module explores the distribution of HIV/AIDS and the importance of surveillance. Topics include case definition, surveillance methods, and ethical considerations. Students learn to interpret surveillance data for changes in incidence, prevalence, and subgroup differences.

dcartee
Download Presentation

Descriptive Epidemiology of HIV/AIDS: Counting & Surveillance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Module 1 Overview Context Content Area: Descriptive Epidemiology & Surveillance Essential Question (Generic): How are health-related states or events distributed? Essential Question (Drug Abuse Specific): How is drug abuse distributed? Enduring Epidemiological Understanding: The frequency and distribution of health-related states or events in a population can be determined by systematically collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data. Synopsis In Module 1, students explore how to describe the distribution of health-related states or events. Students begin to uncover and develop the following epidemiological concepts and skills: observing groups of people, counting, the value of a denominator, a case definition, a representative sample, and creating circumstances that encourage truthful responses and protect confidentiality. Lesson 1-1: Counting and Rates Lesson 1-2: Introduction to Surveillance Lesson 1-3: Counting/Describing HIV / AIDS Lesson 1-4: Counting High School Marijuana Use Lesson 1-5: National Survey on Drug Use and Health Lesson 1-6: Other Drug Abuse Surveillance Systems

  2. Module 1 - Descriptive Epidemiology and Surveillance • Lesson 1-3 Counting and Describing HIV/AIDS • Content • Justification for surveillance of HIV/AIDS • Sampler of HIV/AIDS surveillance information • Consideration of HIV/AIDS surveillance in light of case definition, the • surveillance population, surveillance methods, strengths and limitations of • HIV/AIDS surveillance information, HIV/AIDS incidence versus prevalence, • ethical issues in the collection and use of HIV/AIDS data • Uses of HIV/AIDS surveillance data • Big Ideas • HIV/AIDS surveillance in the U.S. is justified, extensive and useful • Surveillance data tell us about changes in HIV/AIDS incidence and prevalence over time, differences in occurrence within subgroups of the population, and differences by geographic location This project is supported by a Science Education Drug Abuse Partnership Award, Grant Number 1R24DA016357-01, from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health.

  3. Where are we? Essential Questions Enduring Understandings

  4. E. Europe & Central Asia 1.7 million Western & Central Europe 740,000 North America 1.4 million East Asia 750,000 North Africa & Middle East 460,000 Caribbean 250,000 South & S.E. Asia 7.8 million Sub-Saharan Africa 24.7 million Latin America 1.7 million Oceania 81,000 Adults and Children Living with HIV - 2006 Estimates The number of people living with HIV has increased from approximately 8 million in 1990 to nearly 40 million today, and continues to increase

  5. Western & Central Europe 740,000 E. Europe & Central Asia 1.7 million North America 1.4 million East Asia 750,000 North Africa & Middle East 460,000 South & S.E. Asia 7.8 million Caribbean 250,000 Sub-Saharan Africa 24.7 million Latin America 1.7 million Oceania 81,000 Significance of Health Problem: - Justifying Surveillance • Criteria • Frequency • Severity • Cost • Preventability • Communicability • Public Interest

  6. Counts • In 2003, the estimated number of diagnoses of AIDS in the United States was 43,171 • Adult and adolescent AIDS cases totaled 43,112 with 31,614 cases in males and 11,498 cases in females • Also in 2003, there were 59 AIDS cases estimated in children under age 13.

  7. http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/

  8. HIV / AIDS Descriptive Epidemiology - Adolescents

  9. HIV / AIDS Descriptive Epidemiology Adolescents

  10. HIV / AIDS - Children Infected at Birth

  11. HIV / AIDS - By Race / Ethnicity

  12. HIV / AIDS - By Race / Ethnicity and Heterosexual Contact

  13. Five Considerations in HIV / AIDS Surveillance • Case Definition - What exactly is being counted)? • Surveillance Population: Who is being monitored to obtain counts? • Surveillance Methods - How are these counts determined? • Quality of Surveillance Information - Are the data accurate, complete, representative of the population, unbiased • Ethics - Are the data collected and used in an ethical manner?

  14. HIV / AIDS Case Definition What exactly is being counted?

  15. Case Definition Case definition: A set of standard criteria for deciding whether a person has a particular disease or other health-related condition • Characteristics of a case definition (depending on the condition, this may include signs, symptoms, time frame, location) • Why needed?

  16. HIV / AIDS Case Definition Definitions of AIDS have changed over the years as more specific virus testing was developed. • Surveillance definitions were revised again in Jan 2000 • CDC now recommends HIV surveillance as an extension of AIDS surveillance (as more HIV+ people are treated and do not progress to AIDS)

  17. HIV / ADIS Surveillance Population Who is being monitored to obtain counts?

  18. Surveillance Population Who will be surveyed? Sample population – who to study (and where, when) Sampling issues – Should everyone be studied, or a sample? If using a sample, need to do it in a valid way (e.g., a random sample) HIV / AIDS: Survey entire population - reporting from all 50 states, District of Columbia, and territories and possessions

  19. HIV/AIDS Surveillance Methods How are these counts determined?

  20. HIV / AIDS Surveillance Flow Chart

  21. HIV / AIDS Surveillance Methods • HIV / AIDS surveillance in the U.S. has a combination of: • Passive Reporting - combination of health care practitioners, hospitals, clinics and laboratories report cases of HIV/AIDS to state and local health departments • Active Reporting – state and local health department personnel collect information by contacting health care practitioners and reviewing medical records in hospitals and and clinics

  22. Types of Information Collected on HIV / AIDS What frequencies and distributions are being collected? • Frequencies (how many cases) • - New cases of HIV / AIDS – Incidence • - Number presently living with HIV / AIDS – Prevalence • Distributions • - Person characteristics such as gender, ethnicity • - Place, such as by state • - Trends over time from 1981 to the present • CDC also monitors: • - Mode of exposure to HIV • - Opportunistic illnesses and virologic and immunoligic status • - Supplemental information such as prescription of antiretroviral and prophylactic therapies

  23. Review: Incidence and Prevalence

  24. HIV / AIDS - New Cases, Deaths, and Prevalence

  25. Quality of HIV / AIDS Surveillance Data Are the data accurate, complete, representative of the population, unbiased? What are the strengths and limitations of the HIV/AIDS information?

  26. HIV / AIDS Data: Strengths and Limitations • Strength: Based on entire population rather than on a sampling strategy • Strength: Cases that are reported are accurate, based on lab test • Limitation: CDC acknowledges that HIV / AIDS data are underestimates of the true incidence and prevalence of HIV / AIDS • - only “confidential, identified” cases are recorded • - not all states report with same degree of • completeness

  27. Ethics in HIV / AIDS Surveillance • Data protection is crucial for this disease - associated with stigma for many • CDC goes to great lengths to enforce data protection rules • - Checked privacy practices in 1994 • - Ongoing activities to enhance privacy • protection

  28. Uses of HIV / AIDS Surveillance Data • Assessment of the status of a health condition • Establishment of priorities • Evaluation of programs • Conduct of research

  29. Uses of HIV / AIDS Surveillance Data • Assessment of the status of a health outcome Tracking new cases over time provides a measure of the speed of an epidemic (uses “Time” information) • Establishment of priorities Early cases of HIV / AIDS among IV drug use helped determine the early public health programs in the U.S. (“Person”) • Evaluation of programs Can evaluate clean-needle programs by comparing change in disease rates in cities with and without such programs (“Place”) • Conduct of research Increases in HIV+ newborns AIDS provided impetus to develop and test drugs for pregnant women with AIDS (“Person”)

  30. Re-Cap • Big Ideas in this Lesson (1-3) • HIV/AIDS surveillance in the U.S. is justified, extensive, and useful • Surveillance data tell us about changes in HIV/AIDS incidence and prevalence over time, differences in occurrence within subgroups of the population, and differences by geographic location This project is supported by a Science Education Drug Abuse Partnership Award, Grant Number 1R24DA016357-01, from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health.

  31. How This Relates to the Next Lesson (1-4) Counting High School Marijuana Use • What question would you ask to be able to determine marijuana use? (Case Definition, Methods) • Who would you include in your survey? (Population) • How would you conduct the survey (telephone, mail, personal interview, internet, or group)? (Methods) • How would you assure that the survey answers are accurate? (Methods, Quality) • What would the limitations of your plan be? (Quality, Ethics)

More Related