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Session 192  Poster Abstracts
New Insights from Incidence and Prevalence Testing
Wednesday, 1-2:30 pm
Poster Hall
    1036

Estimated Prevalence of Undiagnosed HIV Infection: US, End of 2006
Michael Campsmith*, P Rhodes, and I Hall
CDC, Atlanta, GA, US
  1037a HIV Incidence in New York City in 2006
Lucia Torian*, L Forgione, J Eavey, S Kent, and Y Bennani
New York City Dept of Hlth, NY, US
  1037b

Continuing High HIV Incidence in a Cohort of Men Who Have Sex with Men: Bangkok, Thailand
Frits van Griensven*1,2, W Wimonsate1, J McNicholl1,2, S Chaikummao1, W Thienkrua1, C Kittinunvorakoon1, P Mock1, A Varangrat1, P Sirivongrangson3, and P Akarasewi3
1Thailand Ministry of Publ Hlth-US CDC Collaboration, Nonthaburi; 2CDC, Atlanta, GA, US; and 3Thailand Ministry of Publ Hlth, Nonthaburi
    1038

Factors Associated with Acceptance of Opt-Out HIV Screening and Completion of Testing in a Large Urban Emergency Department
James Heffelfinger*1, B Boyett1, K Delaney1, P Patel1, and D White2
1CDC, Atlanta, GA, US and 2Alameda County Med Ctr, Oakland, CA, US
    1039 Counselor- versus Provider-Based HIV Testing in the Emergency Department: Results from the Universal Screening for HIV in the Emergency Room Trial
Rochelle Walensky*1,2,3, C Arbelaez3, W Reichmann3, E Wright3, J Katz3, A Hare3, A Novais3, and E Losina1,3,4
1Ctr for AIDS Res, Harvard Med Sch, Boston, MA, US; 2Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Boston, US; 3Brigham and Women`s Hosp, Boston, MA, US; and 4Boston Univ Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA, US
    1040

Results from a New York City Emergency Department Rapid HIV Testing Program
Katerina Christopoulos*1, B Schackman2, G Lee3, R Green4, and E Morrison4
1San Francisco Gen Hosp, Univ of California, San Francisco, US; 2Weill Med Coll of Cornell Univ, New York, NY, US; 3Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch of Publ Hlth, New York, NY, US; and 4Columbia Univ Med Ctr, New York, NY, US
    1041

Demographics and Characteristics of Undiagnosed HIV in an Urban Emergency Department
H Clauss1, J Collins2, Shaden Eldakar-Hein*2, B Palermo3, N Gentile1, S Adige4, W Pace3, C Duffalo2, J Menajovsky2, and R Bettiker1
1Temple Univ Sch of Med, Philadelphia, PA, US; 2Temple Univ Hosp, Philadelphia, PA, US; 3Drexel Univ Coll of Med, Philadelphia, PA, US; and 4Haverford Coll, PA, US
    1042

Characteristics Associated with Missed Opportunities for HIV Testing: Washington, DC
Manya Magnus*1, I Kuo1, K Shelley1, A Rawls1, L Montanez1, J Peterson1, F Hamilton2, T West-Ojo3, S Hader3, and A Greenberg1
1George Washington Univ Sch of Publ Hlth and Hlth Svcs, Washington, DC, US; 2Family and Med Counseling Svc Inc, Washington, DC, US; and 3HIV/AIDS Admin, District of Columbia Dept of Hlth, US
    1043 Trends in the Frequency of HIV Testing and CD4 Count at Time of Diagnosis among Persons Tested through a Public Health Program: Seattle, Washington, 1995 to 2008
Matthew Golden*1,2, J Stekler1,2, and R Wood1,2
1Publ Hlth-Seattle & King County, WA, US and 2Ctr for AIDS and STD, Univ of Washington, Seattle, US
    1044

HIV Testing and Monitoring in Privately Insured Members Recently Diagnosed with Suspected AIDS-defining Events
Judy Chen*1, H Tian1, E Dahlin-Lee1, F Everhard2, and K Mayer3
1Hlth Benchmarks Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, US; 2Gilead Sci, Foster City, CA, US; and 3Brown Univ, Providence, RI, US
    1045

Decreasing HIV Incidence and Prevalence at the Johns Hopkins Emergency Department with a Concurrent Increase of Virally Suppressed HIV-infected Individuals
Oliver Laeyendecker*1,2, A Oliver2, J Neal2, J Gamiel2, C Krauss2, S Eshleman2, M Owen3, J Shahan2, G Kelen2, and T Quinn1,2
1NIAID, NIH, Baltimore, MD, US; 2Johns Hopkins Univ Sch of Med, Baltimore, MD, US; and 3CDC, Atlanta, GA, US
    1046

Comparison of HIV Incidence and Risk Factors for Recent Infection Based on Longitudinal Follow-up versus Cross-sectional cBED Assay Testing: A Study in Rural South Africa
Till Barnighausen*1, C Wallrauch1, A Welte2,3, T McWalter2,3, N Mbiazana1, J Viljoen1, N Graham1, F Tanser1, A Puren4, and M-L Newell1,5,6
1Africa Ctr for Hlth and Population Studies, Univ of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; 2Sch of Computational and Applied Mathematics, Univ of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; 3Ctr for Excellence in Epi Modelling and Analysis, Stellenbosch Univ, South Africa; 4Natl Inst of Communicable Diseases, Johannesburg, South Africa; 5Africa Ctr for Hlth and Population Studies, Univ of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban; and 6Ctr for Pediatric Epi and and Biostatistics, Univ Coll London, Inst of Child Hlth, UK
    1047

Cost Effectiveness of Repeat HIV Voluntary Counseling and Testing Strategies in Africa
T Reeves1, J Ostermann2,3, J Bartlett1,2,4,5, N Thielman1,2, D Itemba6, and John Crump*1,2,4,5
1Duke Univ Med Ctr, Durham, NC, US; 2Duke Global Hlth Inst, Durham, NC, US; 3Duke Univ, Durham, NC, US; 4Kilimanjaro Christian Med Ctr, Moshi, Tanzania; 5Kilimanjaro Christian Med coll, Moshi, Tanzania; and 6Kilimanjaro Women`s Group Against AIDS, Moshi, Tanzania