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. 2018 May;108(5):652–658. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2018.304321

TABLE 3—

HIV and HCV Coinfection in an Emergency Department Population in New York City: 2015

Characteristic Total No. (Column %) HIV Infection Only, No. (Row %) HCV Infection Only,a No. (Row %) HIV–HCV Coinfection, No. (Row %) Both Negative, No. (Row %)
Total 4975 (100.0) 207 (4.2) 158 (3.2) 39 (0.8) 4571 (91.9)
Gender
 Male 1920 (38.6) 110 (5.7) 94 (4.9) 26 (1.3) 1690 (88.0)
 Female 3055 (61.4) 97 (3.2) 64 (2.1) 13 (0.4) 2881 (94.3)
Age, y
 21–29 794 (16.0) 20 (2.5) 2 (0.3) 0 (0.1) 772 (97.2)
 30–39 767 (15.4) 24 (3.1) 6 (0.8) 3 (0.5) 734 (95.7)
 40–49 777 (15.6) 45 (5.7) 12 (1.5) 6 (0.8) 714 (92.0)
 50–59 981 (19.7) 76 (7.7) 48 (4.9) 12 (1.2) 845 (86.2)
 60–69 838 (16.8) 33 (3.9) 61 (7.3) 16 (1.9) 728 (86.9)
 70–79 564 (11.3) 10 (1.8) 27 (4.7) 0 (0.0) 527 (93.5)
 80–85 254 (5.1) 1 (0.4) 2 (1.0) 0 (0.0) 251 (98.6)
Race/ethnicity
 Black 1601 (32.2) 100 (6.2) 58 (3.6) 15 (1.0) 1428 (89.2)
 Hispanic 2656 (53.4) 90 (3.4) 82 (3.1) 18 (0.7) 2466 (92.8)
 White 316 (6.4) 7 (2.2) 8 (2.4) 2 (0.6) 300 (94.8)
 Other or unknown 402 (8.1) 11 (2.7) 10 (2.4) 3 (0.7) 378 (94.1)
a

HCV infection: HCV RNA viral load ≥ 15 IU/mL.