Number and rate* of newly reported cases? of chronic Hepatitis C virus infection, by demographic characteristics ¡ª United States, 2021
Characteristics | No. | Rate* |
---|---|---|
Total§ | 107,540 | 39.8 |
Age (Years) | ||
0–19 | 935 | 1.4 |
20–29 | 14,850 | 41.9 |
30–39 | 27,578 | 74.9 |
40–49 | 18,089 | 54.6 |
50–59 | 17,501 | 50.2 |
≥60 | 24,149 | 37.8 |
Sex | ||
Male | 69,927 | 52.3 |
Female | 37,205 | 27.3 |
Race/Ethnicity | ||
American Indian/Alaska Native, non-Hispanic | 1,327 | 68.9 |
Asian/Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic | 764 | 4.5 |
Black, non-Hispanic | 9,537 | 27.9 |
White, non-Hispanic | 47,868 | 29.2 |
Hispanic | 4,604 | 10.0 |
Urbanicity ¶ | ||
Urban | 84,588 | 36.3 |
Rural | 21,388 | 57.9 |
HHS Region** | ||
Region 1: Boston | 4,213 | 30.1 |
Region 2: New York | 7,061 | 24.3 |
Region 3: Philadelphia | 16,234 | 53.1 |
Region 4: Atlanta | 30,152 | 57.2 |
Region 5: Chicago | 14,044 | 30.5 |
Region 6: Dallas | 8,307 | 60.4 |
Region 7: Kansas City | 6,057 | 42.5 |
Region 8: Denver | 4,461 | 35.7 |
Region 9: San Francisco | 11,621 | 27.4 |
Region 10: Seattle | 5,390 | 36.9 |
Source: ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø, National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System.
* Rates per 100,000 population.
† Reported confirmed cases. For the case definition, see .
§ Numbers reported in each category may not add up to the total number of reported cases in a year due to cases with missing data or, in the case of race/ethnicity, cases categorized as “Other.”
¶ Urbanicity was categorized according to the 2013 National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) urban-rural classification scheme for counties and county-equivalent entities. Large central metro, large fringe metro, medium metro, and small metro counties were grouped as urban. Micropolitan and noncore counties were grouped as rural.
** US Department of Health and Human Services regions were categorized according to the grouping of states and US territories assigned under each of the 10 . For the purposes of this report, regions with US territories (Region 2 and Region 9) contain data from states only.
During 2021, the rates of newly reported chronic hepatitis C were highest among persons aged 30–39 years, males, non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native persons, those living in rural areas, and persons in US Department of Health and Human Services Region 6 (Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas). Among all newly reported chronic hepatitis C cases during 2021, 27% occurred among persons aged 30–39 years, 65% occurred among males, and 80% occurred in urban areas. Race and ethnicity information was only available for 70,129 (65%) cases of newly reported chronic hepatitis C; after excluding cases with missing race and ethnicity information, 68% of cases occurred among non-Hispanic White persons. Variations of disease rates by race or ethnicity may reflect systemic cultural, behavioral, environmental, and social factors, including structural racism.
- Figure 3.1. Number of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection and estimated infections — United States, 2014–2021
- Figure 3.2. Rates of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2020–2021
- Figure 3.3. Rates of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2021
- Figure 3.4. Rates* of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by age group — United States, 2006–2021
- Figure 3.5. Rates of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by sex — United States, 2006–2021
- Figure 3.6. Rates of reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by race/ethnicity — United States, 2006–2021
- Figure 3.7. Availability of information on risk behaviors or exposures associated with reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection — United States, 2021
- Figure 3.8. Number of newly reported chronic hepatitis C virus infection cases by sex and age — United States, 2021
- Figure 3.9. Rates of death with hepatitis C virus infection listed as a cause of death among residents, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2021
- Table 3.1. Numbers and rates of reported cases† of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2017–2021
- Table 3.2. Numbers and rates of reported cases† of acute hepatitis C virus infection, by demographic characteristics — United States, 2017–2021
- Table 3.3. Reported risk behaviors or exposures among reported cases of acute hepatitis C virus infection — United States, 2021
- Table 3.4. Number of newly reported cases of perinatal hepatitis C virus infection, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2021
- Table 3.5. Number and rate of newly reported cases of chronic hepatitis C virus infection, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2021
- Table 3.6. Number and rate of newly reported cases of chronic hepatitis C virus infection, by demographic characteristics — United States, 2021
- Table 3.7. Numbers and rates of deaths with hepatitis C listed as a cause of death among residents, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2017–2021
- Table 3.8. Numbers and rates of deaths with hepatitis C virus infection listed as a cause of death among residents, by demographic characteristics — United States, 2017–2021