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The disease that came to be called acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS) was first identified in the summer of 1981. By that
time, nearly 100,000 persons in the United States may have been
infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). By the time the
routes of transmission were clearly identified and HIV was
established as the cause of AIDS in 1983, over 300,000 people may
have been infected. That number has continued to increase, with
approximately 1,000,000 Americans believed to be infected in 1991.
The epidemic is of great public health concern because HlV is
infectious, causes severe morbidity and death in most if not all of
those infected, and often occurs in relatively young persons. In
addition, the cost of medical care for a person with HIV disease is
high, and the medical care needs of HIV-infected persons place a
severe burden on the medical care systems in many areas.
Understanding and controlling the HIV epidemic is a particularly
difficult challenge. The long and variable period between HIV
infection and clinical disease makes it difficult both to forecast
the future magnitude of the epidemic, which is important for health
care planning, and to estimate the number infected in the last
several years, which is important for monitoring the current status
of the epidemic.
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