Title: Area and Population Characteristics
1Area and Population Characteristics
- Scott Holmberg, MD, MPH (RTI)
- For the Area and Population
- Characteristics Panel
2Area Characteristics Panel
- Jill Ashman (HRSA)
- Matthew Bramlett (NCHS)
- Celia Gabrel (HRSA)
- Jo Ann Hilger (NYC)
- Scott Holmberg (RTI)
- Andy Jordan (HRSA)
- Faye Malitz (HRSA)
- Kathleen McDavid (CDC)
- Chuck Nelson (US Census Bureau)
- David Rein (RTI)
- Ebony Ross (HSR)
- Mona Scully (NYS)
- Pat Sweeney (CDC)
- Ella Tardy (Miss.)
Non-voting coordinators
3Underlying Considerations in Arriving at a
Severity-of-Need (SON) Index
- Actual HIV/AIDS prevalence and incidence would
be critical to any determination of SON - Measures of poverty and/or lack of HIV services
would also be critical to any SON index and - These would be relatively easy to obtain given
US Census, CDC, HRSA, and other available
datasets (just kidding)
4 Area Characteristics variables panelists
priority scores, where 1 (most important)- 5
(least important)
- HIV/AIDS Disease Prevalence 1.08
- Poverty Rate
1.69 - Uninsured Rate
1.77 - Access to Primary Care Providers 2.62
- Median Income
2.62 - Unemployment Rate 3.08
- HRSA Supported Clinics 3.38
- STI Burden
4.08
5Defining the issues turned out to be a lot easier
than resolving them.
6We considered three general categories of area
characteristics that would determine need
- Burden of diseaseactual AIDS and HIV cases
- Health infrastructurehow well could an area
accommodate HIV/AIDS patients and - Poverty and other indices of need (how many
HIV/AIDS patients needed but could not get care).
7General formula that underlay our thinking
- Severity of Need
- A function of the number of HIV cases-- minus
those already cared for-- times medical need
(cost)
8Burden of Disease
- How many persons with HIV infection or AIDS
will need care?
9 Burden of DiseaseVariables suggested for
inclusion
- ? Prevalence of HIV/AIDS disease
- (score, 1.08)
- ? Prevalence of Chlamydia and
- NGU infections (score, 4.08)
10Burden of Disease AIDS Cases only
11Burden of Disease AIDS and HIV Cases, as
reported to CDC
12Burden of Disease AIDS/HIV Cases, adjusted for
states without, or with recent, HIV reporting
13Burden of Disease Chlamydia and non-gonococcal
urethritis (NGU) reporting
14 Thought question
- Which of these potential systems would you use?
- AIDS only
- AIDS and HIV
- AIDS and HIV, adjusted for localities without
HIV reporting - Chlamydia/NGU reports
15SON Area Characteristics Working Group
16Our Groups Decision
- We recommended counting all cases reported
through CDCs national AIDS and HIV reporting - An important caveat the final arbiters may
decide to use an adjustment for the minority of
states with recent or no HIV reporting systems.
17Next variable for considerationHealth
infrastructure
- Area capabilities to care for current HIV/AIDS
cases - Difficult, as there is no direct measurement of
this (such as surveillance or census data).
18 Health Infrastructure Variables suggested
for inclusion
- ? Access to primary care providers
- (score, 2.62)
- ? HRSA supported clinics and providers
- (score, 3.38)
19Areas ability to provide HIV care for those
needing it
20Areas ability to provide HIV care for those
needing it
21Variables considered for possible inclusion in an
HIV/AIDS SON index
22Final Area Characteristic considered poverty
- The problem with this variable was the many
different but comparable (co-linear) measures
of poverty in an area
23Poverty and census characteristics Variables
suggested for inclusion
- ? Percent below 100 federal poverty level
(score, 1.69) - ? Percent with no health insurance (score, 1.77)
- ? Percent unemployed (score, 3.08)
- ? Median household income (score, 2.62)
- ? Population size
24Variables considered for possible inclusion in an
HIV/AIDS SON index
25Issues
- Group consensus good on the vast
- majority of issues
- Larger, recurrent issues
- How to count AIDS/HIV cases potentially needing
care under RW Care act - Some measures are of the same parameter (eg,
several variables are linked to poverty)which is
best? - Political realities.