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. 2018 Nov 20;133(2 Suppl):34S–42S. doi: 10.1177/0033354918801026

Table 1.

Nonreactive and reactive results of HIV testing among 3630 pharmacy clients at 32 Walgreens retail pharmacies participating in a Virginia Department of Health pharmacy testing program, by demographic characteristics, Virginia, June 1, 2014, through September 29, 2016a

Tested Nonreactive Reactive
Characteristics No. No. % of All Nonreactive No. % of All Reactive % of Tested, by Row
Total 3630 3600 100b 30 100 0.8
Race/ethnicity
 American Indian/Alaska Native 23 23 0.6 0 0 0
 Asian 160 160 4.4 0 0 0
 Black/African American 1827 1804 50.1 23 76.7 1.3
 Hispanic/Latino 368 368 10.2 0 0 0
 >1 race 38 38 1.1 0 0 0
 Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 11 11 0.3 0 0 0
 White 1061 1055 29.3 6 20.0 0.6
 Unknown 142 141 3.9 1 3.3 0.7
Previous HIV test
 Don’t know 286 282 7.8 4 13.3 1.4
 No 1382 1369 38.0 13 43.3 0.9
 Not asked 124 123 3.4 1 3.3 0.8
 Yes 1819 1807 50.2 12 40.0 0.7
 Declined to answer 19 19 0.5 0 0 0
Age range, y
 13-19 107 106 2.9 1 3.3 0.9
 20-29 1589 1575 43.8 14 46.7 0.9
 30-39 1073 1062 29.5 11 36.7 1.0
 40-49 421 418 11.6 3 10.0 0.7
 50-59 223 223 6.2 0 0 0
 ≥60 82 81 2.3 1 3.3 1.2
 No age data 135 135 3.8 0 0 0
Gender
 Female 1473 1467 40.8 6 20.0 0.4
 Male 2122 2098 58.3 24 80.0 1.1
 Transgender 6 6 0.2 0 0 0
 Unknown 29 29 0.8 0 0 0

a Testing was conducted in the following cities: Aldie, Alexandria, Centreville, Charlottesville, Chesterfield, Collinsville, Culpeper, Danville, Fairfax, Fredericksburg, Hampton, Hopewell, Louisa, Lynchburg, Manassas, Martinsville, Newport News, Norfolk, Petersburg, Reston, Richmond, Roanoke, South Boston, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, Williamsburg, Winchester, and Woodbridge. The testing program was part of the Care and Prevention in the United States Demonstration Project (2012-2016), which aimed to reduce HIV-related morbidity and mortality among racial/ethnic minority groups in 8 states.15

b Some percentages do not total to 100.0 because of rounding.