Author:
HUGHES G.,PORTER K.,GILL O. N.
Abstract
Two indirect methods were used to estimate the point prevalence
of HIV infection in England
and Wales at the end of 1993 using data on diagnosed HIV infections, AIDS
cases,
HIV-related deaths and HIV testing behaviour from unlinked anonymous surveys.
The methods
estimated the proportion of all prevalent HIV infections that diagnosed
infections represented.
Most of those exposed to HIV infection through injecting drug use or sexual
intercourse
between men had had their infections diagnosed compared to less than half
of those exposed
through heterosexual intercourse. The total estimated number of prevalent
infections was 22350
for the diagnosis interval method and 20540 for the test history
method, and about 56–57%
of these were in homo/bisexual men. These indirect methods are cheap
and simple applications
of surveillance data which provide estimates that compare favourably with
those produced by
more complex methods.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
5 articles.
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