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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government 
Information, and International Security, Committee on Homeland Security 
and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:30 p.m. EDT: 

Thursday, June 23, 2005: 

Ryan White CARE Act: 

Factors that Impact HIV and AIDS Funding and Client Coverage: 

Statement of Marcia Crosse:
Director, Health Care: 

GAO-05-841T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-05-841T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Federal Financial Management, Government Information, and International 
Security, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. 
Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act (CARE Act) 
was enacted in 1990 to respond to the needs of individuals and families 
living with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) or Acquired 
Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). In fiscal year 2004, over $2 billion 
in funding was provided through the CARE Act, the majority of which was 
distributed through Title I grants to eligible metropolitan areas (EMA) 
and Title II grants to states, the District of Columbia, and 
territories. Titles I and II use formulas to distribute grants 
according to a jurisdiction’s reported count of AIDS cases. Title II 
includes grants for state-administered AIDS Drug Assistance Programs 
(ADAP), which provide medications to HIV-infected individuals. 

GAO was asked to discuss the distribution of funding under the CARE 
Act. This testimony presents preliminary findings on (1) the impact of 
CARE Act provisions that distribute funds based upon the number of AIDS 
cases in metropolitan areas, (2) the impact of CARE Act provisions that 
limit annual funding decreases, (3) the potential shifts in funding 
among grantees if HIV case counts were incorporated with the AIDS cases 
that are currently used in funding formulas, and (4) the variation in 
eligibility criteria and funding sources among state ADAPs. 

What GAO Found: 

Under the CARE Act, GAO’s preliminary findings show that the amount of 
funding per AIDS case varied among states and metropolitan areas in 
fiscal year 2004. Some CARE Act provisions that distribute funds based 
on the AIDS case count within metropolitan areas result in differing 
amounts of funding per case. In particular, when a state or territory 
has an EMA within its borders, the cases within that EMA are counted 
twice during the distribution of CARE Act funds—once to determine the 
EMA’s funding under Title I, and once again to determine a state’s 
Title II grant. 

The hold-harmless provisions under Titles I and II guarantee a certain 
percentage of a previous year’s funding amount, thus sustaining the 
funding levels of CARE Act grantees based upon previous years’ 
measurements of AIDS cases. Title I’s hold-harmless provision for EMAs 
has primarily benefited the San Francisco EMA, which received over 90 
percent of the fiscal year 2004 Title I hold-harmless funding. San 
Francisco alone continues to have deceased cases factored in to its 
allocation, because it is the only EMA with hold-harmless funding that 
dates back to the mid-1990s when formula funding was based on the 
cumulative count of diagnosed AIDS cases. 

If HIV case counts had been incorporated with AIDS cases in allocating 
Title II funding to the states in fiscal year 2004, about half of the 
states would have received an increase in funding and half of the 
states would have received less funding. Many of those states receiving 
increased funding would have been in the South, a region that includes 
7 of the 10 states with the highest estimated rates of individuals 
living with HIV. However, wide variation in the maturity of states’ HIV 
reporting systems could limit the adequacy of their HIV case counts for 
the distribution of CARE Act funding. 

Among state ADAPs, there is wide variation in the criteria used to 
determine who is eligible for ADAP medications and services, and in the 
additional funding received beyond the Title II grant for each state 
ADAP. States have flexibility to determine what drugs they will cover 
for their ADAP clients and what income level will entitle a person to 
eligibility, among other criteria, and the resulting variation can 
contribute to client coverage differences among state ADAPs. There is 
similar variation in additional funding sources and eligibility 
criteria among states that have established waiting lists for eligible 
clients. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Health 
Resources and Services Administration provided comments on the facts 
contained in this testimony and GAO made changes as appropriate. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-841T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Marcia Crosse at (202) 
512-7118. 

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the Ryan White Comprehensive 
AIDS Resources Emergency Act of 1990 (CARE Act).[Footnote 1] I will 
specifically address factors that impact CARE Act funding of services 
for those with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) or Acquired 
Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) and program coverage for CARE Act 
clients. As of December 2003, over 1 million individuals within the 
United States are estimated to be infected with HIV, including about 
406,000 individuals with AIDS. Administered by the Health Resources and 
Services Administration (HRSA), the CARE Act makes funds available to 
states and localities to provide health care, medications, and support 
services to individuals and families affected by HIV and AIDS. 

In fiscal year 2004, more than $2 billion was provided through the CARE 
Act for these health care and support services. The majority of these 
funds were distributed under Title I and Title II within the CARE Act 
through formula-derived base grants, which distribute funding to all 
eligible jurisdictions, and through supplemental grants, which 
distribute funding to a subset of all eligible jurisdictions. Title I 
provides funding to all eligible metropolitan areas (EMA) according to 
an EMA's number of AIDS cases.[Footnote 2] Title II provides funding to 
all states, territories, and the District of Columbia. Within both of 
these titles are formula grants intended to distribute funds 
proportionally to grantees based upon a measure of each grantee's share 
of AIDS cases. Grantees' reports of AIDS cases are used in funding 
formulas because when the CARE Act was enacted in 1990, most 
jurisdictions tracked and reported AIDS cases instead of HIV cases. 

The CARE Act's reauthorizations in 1996 and 2000 modified the original 
funding formulas. Prior to the 1996 reauthorization, the CARE Act 
measured a jurisdiction's caseload by its cumulative count of AIDS 
cases, which is the number of AIDS cases recorded since reporting began 
in 1981. The 1996 reauthorization changed the measurement of a 
jurisdiction's caseload to an estimation of the number of living AIDS 
cases.[Footnote 3] This switch would have resulted in large shifts of 
funding away from jurisdictions with a longer history of the disease 
and a higher proportion of deceased cases than other jurisdictions. The 
CARE Act includes hold-harmless provisions under Title I and Title II 
that protect grantees from decreases in funding from one year to the 
next. Title I of the CARE Act also includes a grandfather clause for 
EMAs. A type of hold-harmless itself, this grandfather clause 
guarantees that once a metropolitan area has become an EMA, it will 
continue to receive funding under Title I, even if its caseload drops 
below the threshold for eligibility. The most recent reauthorization of 
the CARE Act in 2000 maintained these modifications, and it further 
specified that HIV cases should be used in funding formulas no later 
than fiscal year 2007. As of June 2005, HIV case counts have not been 
used to distribute funding under the CARE Act. 

A portion of Title II funding is for state AIDS Drug Assistance 
Programs (ADAP), which provide medications to infected individuals. In 
fiscal year 2004, Title II base ADAP grants--the ADAP grant given to 
all states--totaled $728 million, accounting for 36 percent of all CARE 
Act funding. The programs are administered at the state level and each 
state is allowed flexibility in determining its program eligibility 
criteria and the drugs it provides. Some ADAPs establish waiting lists 
for eligible individuals for a period of time when the ADAP cannot 
provide covered drugs. 

To assist the subcommittee in its consideration of the CARE Act, my 
testimony provides our preliminary findings on some of the issues we 
are reviewing for the Chairman and other requesters. My remarks today 
will focus on selected provisions of the CARE Act and ADAP. 
Specifically, I will discuss: 

1. the impact of CARE Act provisions on the distribution of funds that 
is based upon the number of AIDS cases in metropolitan areas,

2. the impact of the CARE Act's hold-harmless provisions and a 
grandfather clause on the distribution of funds,

3. the potential shifts in funding among grantees if HIV case counts 
had been incorporated in fiscal year 2004 funding formulas, and: 

4. the variation in eligibility criteria and funding sources among the 
state ADAPs. 

To address these issues and those within our broader review of the CARE 
Act, we interviewed officials from HRSA and the Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention (CDC). CDC collects HIV and AIDS case counts 
from states and territories. We also interviewed officials from the 
National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors. We obtained 
and analyzed data from HRSA regarding the distribution of CARE Act 
funding and from CDC regarding AIDS and HIV case counts.[Footnote 4] We 
obtained and analyzed HIV case counts from those states from which CDC 
does not accept these data because they do not use names to identify 
the cases. CDC and the states provided us with case counts that were 
available as of June 30, 2003, the cutoff date for data used to 
determine fiscal year 2004 funding. HRSA provided us with CARE Act 
funding distributions for fiscal year 2004.[Footnote 5] Based on the 
information HRSA, CDC, and the states provided regarding its 
verification of the reliability of these data, we determined these data 
to be sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our analyses. We 
performed our work from July 2004 through June 2005 according to 
generally accepted government auditing standards. CDC and HRSA provided 
comments on the facts contained in this statement, and we made changes 
as appropriate. 

In brief, our analysis shows that certain CARE Act Title I and Title II 
provisions related to the distribution of funds to metropolitan areas 
result in variability between the amounts of funding per case among 
grantees. States and territories that have EMAs within their borders 
receive more funding per estimated living AIDS case than those without 
EMAs because cases within EMAs are counted twice--once to determine 
Title I funding to EMAs, and once again to determine a state's Title II 
grant. Metropolitan areas that have been affected by the epidemic but 
do not have the necessary number of AIDS cases to become EMAs and 
receive Title I funding may qualify for funding as Emerging Communities 
under Title II. However, the allocation of these grants is made by 
separating eligible jurisdictions into two tiers based on their 
reported number of AIDS cases. Because one half of the total Emerging 
Communities grant award is allocated to each tier regardless of how 
many cases are in each tier, in fiscal year 2004 jurisdictions in one 
tier received $1,052 per case while jurisdictions in the other tier 
received $313 per case. 

The hold-harmless provisions under Titles I and II and the grandfather 
clause for EMAs under Title I sustain the funding and eligibility of 
CARE Act grantees on the basis of a previous year's measurements of the 
number of AIDS cases in these jurisdictions. By guaranteeing either a 
certain percentage of previous years' funding amounts or an EMA's 
eligibility to receive funding, these provisions make it more difficult 
for CARE Act funding to track the most current distribution of the 
epidemic. The San Francisco EMA has primarily benefited from Title I's 
hold-harmless provision, receiving over 90 percent ($7,358,239) of the 
fiscal year 2004 Title I hold-harmless funding. San Francisco's current 
hold-harmless funding can be traced to its 1995 base grant, which was 
determined using the cumulative number of AIDS cases, living and dead, 
reported since 1981. In essence, deceased cases are still being used to 
determine funding for San Francisco. Hold-harmless provisions under 
Title II also sustain a state's level of funding based on case counts 
from previous years. Because funding for one of these Title II hold-
harmless provisions is drawn from a set-aside for states with a severe 
need for drug assistance, this hold-harmless provision could affect the 
amount of funding received by these severe-need states in the future. 
The grandfather clause in Title I maintained the funding for 29 of the 
51 EMAs that became eligible for Title I base grants in the past. These 
EMAs, however, would not have qualified for Title I base grants in 
fiscal year 2004 based upon their case counts, which were below the 
eligibility threshold of 2,000 reported AIDS cases in the last 5 
calendar years. 

If the HIV case counts from state reporting systems had been used with 
estimated living AIDS cases in allocating fiscal year 2004 Title II 
base funding, about half of the states would have received increased 
funding and the other half would have received decreased funding. Using 
two different approaches, we found that at least 11 of the states with 
increased funding were located in the South, the region with the 
highest estimated number of people living with HIV or AIDS in 2003. All 
states have established HIV case reporting systems, and the 2000 
reauthorization of the CARE Act required that HIV cases be used in 
determining formula funding no later than fiscal year 2007. However, 
wide differences between states' HIV case reporting systems--in their 
maturity and reporting methods, for instance--could affect the use of 
HIV and AIDS case counts to distribute CARE Act funding because an 
immature reporting system might not capture an accurate count of a 
state's HIV cases. More mature systems have longer histories of 
collecting newly diagnosed HIV cases and retroactively reporting HIV 
cases that had been diagnosed before the reporting system existed. We 
found that funding would have shifted to jurisdictions with more mature 
HIV reporting systems, which includes many of the reporting systems in 
the South. However, changes in funding would be largely offset, at 
least initially, if the funding formulas included hold-harmless and 
minimum grant provisions. 

There is wide variation among state ADAPs in the eligibility criteria 
they set for their programs and in the additional funding those 
programs receive from sources other than their Title II base ADAP 
grant. States determine what drugs they will cover for their ADAP 
clients and what income level will make a client eligible for ADAP 
coverage, among other criteria. States also vary in the amount of 
funding they receive from other sources in addition to their Title II 
ADAP base grant. State ADAPs can receive funding from a variety of 
sources, including transfers from other CARE Act grants and 
contributions from states, that can lead to a wide range of funding 
amounts per AIDS case. However, we did not find a relationship between 
any one factor--a particular income eligibility criterion, for example, 
or a type of additional funding beyond the base grant--and the 
existence of a waiting list of ADAP clients that could not be served at 
a particular time. 

Background: 

Over the course of the last quarter century, the epidemic has spread to 
every region of the country. HIV and AIDS cases have been reported in 
all states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories, but the 
impact of the epidemic varies by region and within states. The South is 
estimated to have the highest cumulative number of diagnosed AIDS 
cases, people living with AIDS, and deaths from AIDS. In 2003, 7 of the 
10 states with the highest estimated rates of individuals living with 
HIV were located in the South. 

The CARE Act was enacted in 1990 to respond to the needs of individuals 
and families living with HIV or AIDS and to direct federal funding to 
areas disproportionately affected by the epidemic. Titles I and II of 
the act provide base funding to affected EMAs and states based on the 
proportion of each jurisdiction's caseload of AIDS cases. These titles 
also establish other types of grants to provide supplemental 
funding.[Footnote 6] For example, Title II includes Severe Need grants 
for states with demonstrated need for supplemental funding to support 
their ADAPs. Title II also includes funding for emerging communities 
that are affected by AIDS but do not have the 2,000 AIDS cases reported 
in the last 5 calendar years in order to be eligible for Title I 
funding as EMAs. In order to address the impact of the disease on 
racial and ethnic minorities, Minority AIDS Initiative grants are 
distributed through both Title I and Title II to EMAs and states. 

Metropolitan areas heavily affected by HIV or AIDS have always been 
recognized within the structure of the CARE Act. We previously found 
that, with combined funding under Title I and Title II, states with 
EMAs receive more funding per AIDS case than states without 
EMAs.[Footnote 7] To adjust for this situation, the 1996 
reauthorization instituted a two-part formula for Title II base funding 
that takes into account the number of AIDS cases that reside within a 
state but outside of any EMA's jurisdiction. Under this distribution 
formula, 80 percent of the Title II base grant is based upon a state's 
proportion of all AIDS cases, and twenty percent of the allocation is 
based on the number of AIDS cases within that state's borders but 
outside of EMAs. A second provision included in 1996 protected the 
eligibility of EMAs. The 1996 CARE Act amendments provided that once a 
jurisdiction is designated an EMA, that jurisdiction is "grandfathered" 
so it will always receive some amount of funding under Title I even if 
its reported number of AIDS cases drops below the threshold for 
eligibility. Hold-harmless provisions and the grandfather clause were 
maintained in the 2000 reauthorization of the CARE Act. Table 1 
describes selected CARE Act formula grants for Titles I and II. 

Table 1: Description of Selected CARE Act Title I and Title II Formula 
Grants: 

Formula grant: Title I Base Grant; 
Eligible grantees: Jurisdictions with 500,000 or more in population and 
with 2,000 reported AIDS cases in the most recent 5 calendar years 
become, and remain, EMAs; 
Distribution: Distributed among all EMAs based on proportion of all 
AIDS cases; 
Minimum grant: No; 
Hold-harmless provision[A]: Grant annually declines to 98%, 95%, 92%, 
and 89% of the base year grant, respectively.[B] In fifth and all 
subsequent years, EMA receives 85% of base year grant. 

Formula grant: Title II Base Grant; 
Eligible grantees: All 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. 
territories; 
Distribution: Eighty percent of base grant divided among 
states/territories based upon their proportion of all AIDS cases. 
Twenty percent of base grant is divided among states/territories based 
upon proportion of all AIDS cases that are located outside the EMAs 
within the states'/territories' borders; 
Minimum grant: For states with less than 90 AIDS cases, $200,000; 
states with 90 or more AIDS cases, $500,000; for territories, $50,000; 
Hold-harmless provision[A]: Base formula grant declines by 1% per year 
from the fiscal year 2000 award. In fifth and subsequent years of 
provision, grant remains at 95% of 2000 appropriation. 

Formula grant: Title II ADAP Base Grant; 
Eligible grantees: All 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. 
territories; 
Distribution: Distributed among all states/territories according to 
their proportion of all AIDS cases; 
Minimum grant: No; 
Hold-harmless provision[A]: Grant declines by 1% per year from the 
fiscal year 2000 grant. In fifth and subsequent years of provision, 
funding remains at 95% of 2000 grant. 

Formula grant: Title II ADAP Severe Need Grant[C]; 
Eligible grantees: States and territories demonstrating a severe need 
that prevents them from providing medications to clients in a manner 
consistent with Public Health Service guidelines; 
Distribution: Distributed among all qualifying states/territories based 
upon their proportion of AIDS cases in all qualifying 
states/territories; eligible states/territories must also agree to 
match 25% of their Severe Need grant; 
Minimum grant: No; 
Hold-harmless provision[A]: No. 

Formula grant: Title II Emerging Communities Grant; 
Eligible grantees: Jurisdictions with more than 50,000 in population, 
not eligible for Title I, and with 500-1,999 reported AIDS cases in the 
most recent 5 calendar years; 
Distribution: Funds are divided into two tiers: 50% distributed among 
communities with 1,000-1,999 AIDS cases, and 50% distributed among 
communities with 500-999 AIDS cases, based on their proportion of AIDS 
cases in Emerging Communities within the tier; 
Minimum grant: Minimum of $5 million for each tier; 
Hold-harmless provision[A]: No. 

Source: HRSA. 

[A] If the distribution formula would otherwise result in decreased 
funding, a hold-harmless provision may be triggered to mitigate the 
decrease in funding. 

[B] The base year is the fiscal year prior to that in which the 
provision is triggered. 

[C] Funding for Severe Need grants may be reduced to maintain funding 
for some states under a Title II hold-harmless provision. 

[End of table]

The 2000 reauthorization specified that CARE Act Title I and Title II 
funding formulas should use HIV case counts as early as fiscal year 
2005 if such data were available and deemed "sufficiently accurate and 
reliable" by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS).[Footnote 
8] The 2000 reauthorization also required that HIV data be used no 
later than the beginning of fiscal year 2007. In June 2004 the 
Secretary of HHS determined that HIV data were not yet ready to be used 
for the purposes of allocating formula funding under Title I and Title 
II of the CARE Act. The Secretary cited a 2004 Institute of Medicine 
(IOM) report, which identified several limitations in the ability of 
states to provide adequate and reliable HIV case counts for use in CARE 
Act formula allocations.[Footnote 9]

CARE Act Funding Provisions Result in Disproportionate Funding: 

Some CARE Act provisions have led to jurisdictions receiving different 
amounts of funding per AIDS cases. The counting of AIDS cases within 
EMAs once to determine Title I funding and once again to determine 
Title II funding results in states with EMAs receiving more funding per 
AIDS case than states without an EMA. In addition, Emerging Communities 
grants are awarded to eligible communities that are separated into two 
tiers based on each community's AIDS cases reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years. Because one half of the total Emerging Communities 
grant award is allocated to each tier regardless of the total number of 
reported AIDS cases in each tier, a disproportionate amount of funding 
per case was distributed among the grantees in fiscal year 2004. 

Counting AIDS Cases within EMAs Twice Results in Unequal Funding per 
Case Across States: 

States with EMAs receive more funding per AIDS case than jurisdictions 
without EMAs because cases within EMAs are counted twice. The number of 
AIDS cases used to allocate CARE Act Title I base grants for EMAs is 
also used in the allocation of 80 percent of Title II base grants for 
states. The remaining 20 percent is based on the number of AIDS cases 
in each state outside of any EMA. This 80/20 split was established by 
the CARE Act's 1996 amendments to address the fact that states with 
EMAs received more funding per case than states without EMAs. However, 
even with the 80/20 split, states with EMAs still receive more funding 
per AIDS case. States without an EMA receive no funding under the Title 
I distribution, and thus, when total Title I and Title II CARE Act 
funds are considered, states with EMAs receive more funding per AIDS 
case. [Footnote 10] Appendix I shows the combined fiscal year 2004 
funding for all Title I and Title II funding received by each state. 

Table 2 illustrates the effect of counting EMA cases twice by comparing 
the relationship between the percentage of a state's AIDS cases that 
are within an EMA's jurisdiction and the amount of funding a state 
receives per AIDS case. Table 2 shows that as the percentage of a 
state's AIDS cases within EMAs increases, the total Title I and II 
funding per AIDS case also increases for the state. For example, states 
with no AIDS cases in EMAs received on average $3,592 per AIDS case. 
States with 75 percent or more of their cases in EMAs received on 
average $4,955 per AIDS case, or 38 percent more funding than states 
with no EMA. If the total Title I and Title II funding had been 
distributed equally per AIDS case among all grantees, each state would 
have received $4,782 per AIDS case. 

Table 2: Total CARE Act Title I and II Funding per AIDS Case, Fiscal 
Year 2004: 

Percentage of state's AIDS cases in EMAs: None; 
Average funding per AIDS case[A]: $3,592. 

Percentage of state's AIDS cases in EMAs: Less than 50 percent; 
Average funding per AIDS case[A]: $3,954. 

Percentage of state's AIDS cases in EMAs: 50 to 75 percent; 
Average funding per AIDS case[A]: $4,717. 

Percentage of state's AIDS cases in EMAs: 75 percent or more; 
Average funding per AIDS case[A]: $4,955. 

Source: GAO analysis of HRSA data. 

[A] In order to isolate the effect of counting AIDS cases in EMAs 
twice, we excluded from our analyses the nine states and six 
territories that received minimum Title II base grant awards. Under 
Title II, states with less than 90 cases receive no less than $200,000 
in Title II base grant and states with 90 or more cases receive at 
least $500,000. 

[End of table]

The impact of counting EMA cases twice is that states with similar 
numbers of AIDS cases can receive different levels of combined Title I 
and Title II funding. For example, for fiscal year 2004 funding, 
Connecticut had 5,363 AIDS cases while South Carolina had 5,563 AIDS 
cases. However, Connecticut had two EMAs that accounted for 91.3 
percent of its cases while South Carolina had none. Connecticut 
received $26,797,308 ($4,997 per AIDS case) in combined Title I and 
Title II funding while South Carolina, with 200 more cases, received 
$20,705,328 ($3,722 per AIDS case). Connecticut received 29 percent 
more funding than South Carolina, a difference of $6,091,980, or $1,275 
per AIDS case. 

The Tiered Allocation of Title II Funds for Emerging Communities 
Results in Funding Disparities Among States: 

The two-tiered division of Emerging Communities grants results in 
disparities in funding per case among states. In addition to the base 
grants for states, Title II provides a minimum of $10 million in 
supplemental grants to states for communities with populations greater 
than 50,000 that have a certain number of AIDS cases in the last 5 
calendar years. The funding is equally split so that half the funding 
is divided among the first tier of communities with 500 to 999 reported 
cases in the most recent 5 calendar years while the other half is 
divided among a second tier of communities with 1,000 to 1,999 reported 
cases in that period. The funding is then allocated within each tier by 
the proportion of reported cases in the most recent 5 calendar years in 
each community. 

In fiscal year 2004, the two-tiered structure of Emerging Communities 
funding led to large differences in funding per case because the total 
number of AIDS cases in each tier was not equal. Twenty-nine 
communities qualified for Emerging Communities grants in fiscal year 
2004. Four of these communities had between 1,000 and 1,999 reported 
cases and 25 communities had between 500 and 999 cases. This meant that 
4 communities with a total of 4,754 reported cases split $5 million 
while 25 communities with a total of 15,994 cases split the remaining 
$5 million. This resulted in the 4 communities receiving $1,052 per 
reported case while the other 25 received $313 per reported case. These 
4 communities received 236 percent more funding per case than the other 
25. If the total $10 million Emerging Communities funding had been 
distributed equally per case among the communities, each would have 
received $482 per reported case. Table 3 lists the 29 emerging 
communities along with their AIDS case counts and funding. 

Table 3: Title II Emerging Communities in Fiscal Year 2004: 

State: Tenn; 
Metropolitan area: Memphis; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 1,588; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $1,052. 

State: Tenn; 
Metropolitan area: Nashville; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 1,123; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $1,052. 

State: La; 
Metropolitan area: Baton Rouge; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 1,038; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $1,052. 

State: Ind; 
Metropolitan area: Indianapolis; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 1,005; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $1,052. 

State: S.C; 
Metropolitan area: Columbia; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 972; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.C; 
Metropolitan area: Charlotte; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 875; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Del; 
Metropolitan area: Wilmington; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 801; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Va; 
Metropolitan area: Richmond; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 783; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.C; 
Metropolitan area: Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 775; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Miss; 
Metropolitan area: Jackson; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 722; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Ky; 
Metropolitan area: Louisville; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 705; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.Y; 
Metropolitan area: Rochester; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 681; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Fla; 
Metropolitan area: Fort Pierce-Port St. Lucie; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 636; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.C; 
Metropolitan area: Greensboro--Winston-Salem; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 617; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Ala; 
Metropolitan area: Birmingham; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 615; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Okla; 
Metropolitan area: Oklahoma City; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 608; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Pa; 
Metropolitan area: Pittsburgh; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 602; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Mass; 
Metropolitan area: Springfield; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 588; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.J; 
Metropolitan area: Monmouth-Ocean; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 582; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: N.Y; 
Metropolitan area: Buffalo-Niagara Falls; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 581; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: S.C; 
Metropolitan area: Greenville; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 560; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Ohio; 
Metropolitan area: Columbus; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 558; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Wisc; 
Metropolitan area: Milwaukee; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 558; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Utah; 
Metropolitan area: Salt Lake City; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 555; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Fla; 
Metropolitan area: Sarasota; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 539; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: S.C; 
Metropolitan area: Charleston; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 538; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Ohio; 
Metropolitan area: Cincinnati; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 517; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: Fla; 
Metropolitan area: Daytona Beach; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 514; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

State: R.I; 
Metropolitan area: Providence; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 512; 
Emerging Communities funding per AIDS case reported in the most recent 
5 calendar years: $313. 

Total; 
AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 20,748. 

Sources: GAO analysis of HRSA data. 

Note: The 5 most recent calendar years are from 1998-2002. 

[End of table]

Hold-Harmless Provisions and Grandfather Clause Benefit Certain 
Grantees: 

Titles I and II of the CARE Act both contain provisions that benefit 
certain grantees by protecting their funding levels. Title I has a hold-
harmless provision that guarantees that the Title I base grant 
allocated to an EMA will be at least as large as a legislated 
percentage of a previous year's funding. The Title I hold-harmless 
provision has primarily benefited one EMA. Title I also contains a 
grandfather clause that has resulted in a large number of EMAs 
maintaining funding despite no longer meeting the eligibility criteria. 
One hold-harmless provision for Title II ensures that the total of 
Title II and ADAP base grants awarded to a state will be at least as 
large as the total of these grants it received the previous year. This 
provision has had little impact thus far, but it has the potential to 
reduce the amount of funding to states with severe need in ADAPs 
because it is funded out of amounts reserved for that purpose. The hold-
harmless provision and the grandfather clause in Title I and the hold-
harmless provisions in Title II protect grantees from decreases in 
funding from one year to the next, but they also make it more difficult 
to shift funding in response to geographic movement of the disease. 

Title I Hold-Harmless Provision Has Primarily Benefited One EMA: 

In fiscal year 2004, the Title I hold-harmless provision primarily 
benefited the San Francisco EMA. The hold-harmless provision guarantees 
each EMA a specified percentage, as legislated by the CARE Act, of the 
base grant it received in a previous year regardless of how much a 
grantee's caseload may have decreased in the current year. An EMA's 
base funding is determined according to its proportion of AIDS cases. 
If an EMA qualifies for hold-harmless funding, that amount is added to 
the base funding and distributed together as the base grant. The San 
Francisco EMA received $7,358,239 in hold-harmless funding, or 91.6 
percent of the hold-harmless funding that was distributed. The second 
largest beneficiary was Kansas City, which received $134,485, or 1.7 
percent of the hold-harmless funding. Table 4 lists the fiscal year 
2004 hold-harmless beneficiaries. 

Table 4: Title I Hold Harmless Funding, Fiscal Year 2004: 

EMA: San Francisco, Calif; 
Hold-harmless funding: $7,358,239; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 91.6%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $1,020; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $2,241; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 45.5%. 

EMA: Kansas City, Mo; 
Hold-harmless funding: $134,485; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 1.7%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $104; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,325; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 7.8%. 

EMA: Santa Rosa, Calif; 
Hold-harmless funding: $22,614; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.3%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $47; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,268; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 3.7%. 

EMA: Sacramento, Calif; 
Hold-harmless funding: $36,456; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.5%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $29; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,251; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 2.3%. 

EMA: Minneapolis-St.Paul, Minn; 
Hold-harmless funding: $33,770; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.4%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $27; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,248; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 2.1%. 

EMA: Bergen-Passaic, N.J; 
Hold-harmless funding: $55,288; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.7%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $26; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,248; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 2.1%. 

EMA: Jersey City, N.J; 
Hold-harmless funding: $58,310; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.7%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $24; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,245; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 1.9%. 

EMA: Oakland, Calif; 
Hold-harmless funding: $50,744; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.6%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $18; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,239; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 1.4%. 

EMA: New Haven, Conn; 
Hold-harmless funding: $42,573; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.5%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $14; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,236; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 1.2%. 

EMA: Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla; 
Hold-harmless funding: $44,908; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.6%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $12; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,233; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.9%. 

EMA: San Jose, Calif; 
Hold-harmless funding: $12,097; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.2%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $11; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,232; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.9%. 

EMA: Boston, Mass; 
Hold-harmless funding: $60,284; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.8%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $10; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,231; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.8%. 

EMA: Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y; 
Hold-harmless funding: $21,212; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.3%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $8; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,230; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.7%. 

EMA: Middlesex-Somerset-Hunterdon, N.J; 
Hold-harmless funding: $8,315; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $7; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,228; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.5%. 

EMA: Jacksonville, Fla; 
Hold-harmless funding: $12,825; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.2%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $6; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,228; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.5%. 

EMA: San Juan, P.R; 
Hold-harmless funding: $41,011; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.5%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $6; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,228; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.5%. 

EMA: Seattle, Wash; 
Hold-harmless funding: $9,844; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $4; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,225; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.3%. 

EMA: Denver, Colo; 
Hold-harmless funding: $6,745; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $3; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,225; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.3%. 

EMA: Cleveland, Ohio; 
Hold-harmless funding: $4,616; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $3; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,224; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.2%. 

EMA: West Palm Beach, Fla; 
Hold-harmless funding: $8,523; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $2; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,224; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.2%. 

EMA: Newark, N.J; 
Hold-harmless funding: $10,975; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0.1%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $2; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,223; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.1%. 

EMA: All Other EMAs; 
Hold-harmless funding: $0; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 0%; 
Hold-harmless funding per AIDS case: $0; 
Base grant per AIDS case[A]: $1,221; 
Percent of base grant due to hold-harmless funding: 0.0%. 

EMA: Total; 
Hold-harmless funding: $8,033,563[B]; 
Percentage of hold-harmless funding: 100.0%. 

Source: GAO analysis of HRSA data. 

Note: An EMA's base funding is determined according to its proportion 
of AIDS cases. If an EMA qualifies for hold-harmless funding, that 
amount is added to the base funding and distributed together as the 
base grant. 

[A] This was calculated by dividing the base formula funding received 
by each EMA by the number of AIDS cases in the EMA. However, because of 
rounding error, some of the calculations are slightly different than if 
the base formula funding per AIDS case without a hold-harmless benefit 
($1,221) is added to the hold-harmless funding per AIDS case. 

[B] Individual entries do not sum to total because of rounding. 

[End of table]

The funding impact of the hold-harmless provision varies among the EMAs 
that benefit but it can be substantial. In order to place hold-harmless 
funding in perspective, it is helpful to consider how much of an EMA's 
Title I base grant was made up of hold-harmless funding. EMAs that did 
not receive hold-harmless funding received approximately $1,221 in base 
grant funding per AIDS case. Fiscal year 2004 base grant funding per 
AIDS case in EMAs that received hold-harmless funding ranged from 
$1,223 (Newark) to $2,241 (San Francisco). Thus, San Francisco received 
$1,020 more in base grant funding per AIDS case than did EMAs that did 
not receive hold-harmless funding. This hold-harmless funding 
represents approximately 46 percent of San Francisco's base grant. 
Because of its hold-harmless funding, San Francisco, which had 7,216 
AIDS cases in fiscal year 2004, received a base grant equivalent to 
what an EMA with approximately 13,245 AIDS cases (84 percent more) 
would have received based on the proportion of cases. Kansas City, the 
second largest hold-harmless grantee, received about what an EMA with 9 
percent more AIDS cases would have received. 

The San Francisco EMA's 2004 hold-harmless funding was linked to 
cumulative AIDS cases used to determine fiscal year 1995 funding. In 
fiscal year 2004 San Francisco was guaranteed to receive 89 percent of 
its fiscal year 2000 Title I base grant, but San Francisco's 2000 
allocation was also held harmless under the 1996 CARE Act 
reauthorization. Under the 1996 reauthorization, EMAs were guaranteed 
95 percent of their 1995 base grant in fiscal year 2000.[Footnote 11] 
San Francisco was the only EMA to qualify for hold-harmless funding in 
2000 because it was the only EMA that would have received less than 95 
percent of its fiscal year 1995 base grant. This means that in fiscal 
year 2004 San Francisco was guaranteed approximately 85 percent of its 
fiscal year 1995 base grant of $19,126,679.[Footnote 12] Prior to the 
1996 reauthorization, funding was distributed among EMAs on the basis 
of the cumulative count of diagnosed AIDS cases (that is, all cases 
reported in an EMA both living and deceased since the beginning of the 
epidemic in 1981). Because the application of the Title I hold-harmless 
provision for San Francisco dates back to the 1996 reauthorization, San 
Francisco's Title I base grant is determined in part by the number of 
cumulative cases in the San Francisco EMA as of 1995. 

Grandfathering Maintains Eligibility for EMAs That No Longer Meet 
Certain Eligibility Criteria: 

More than one half of the EMAs received Title I funding in fiscal year 
2004 even though they were below Title I eligibility 
thresholds.[Footnote 13] These EMAs' eligibility was protected under a 
CARE Act grandfather clause. Under a grandfather clause established by 
the 1996 amendments to the CARE Act, once a metropolitan area's 
eligibility is established, the area remains eligible for Title I 
funding even if the number of reported cases in the most recent 5 
calendar years drops below the statutory threshold. We found that in 
fiscal year 2004, 29 of the 51 EMAs did not meet the eligibility 
thresholds, but their Title I funding was protected by a grandfather 
clause (see table 5). The number of reported AIDS cases in the most 
recent 5 calendar years in the 29 EMAs ranged from 223 to 1,941. Title 
I funding awarded to these 29 EMAs was about $116 million, or 
approximately 20 percent of the total Title I funding. 

Table 5: Grandfathered EMAs, Fiscal Year 2004: 

EMA: Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,941; 
Total Title I funding: $6,823,183. 

EMA: New Haven, Conn.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,717; 
Total Title I funding: $7,069,348. 

EMA: Oakland, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,633; 
Total Title I funding: $6,611,607. 

EMA: Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,560; 
Total Title I funding: $5,951,789. 

EMA: Norfolk, Va.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,502; 
Total Title I funding: $4,820,201. 

EMA: Seattle, Wash.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,459; 
Total Title I funding: $5,842,615. 

EMA: Jacksonville, Fla.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,423; 
Total Title I funding: $4,863,093. 

EMA: Orange County, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,422; 
Total Title I funding: $5,233,329. 

EMA: St. Louis, Mo.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,247; 
Total Title I funding: $4,371,154. 

EMA: Jersey City, N.J.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,226; 
Total Title I funding: $5,884,194. 

EMA: Las Vegas, Nev.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,182; 
Total Title I funding: $4,473,401. 

EMA: Denver, Colo.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,167; 
Total Title I funding: $4,529,097. 

EMA: Austin, Tex.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,149; 
Total Title I funding: $3,800,250. 

EMA: Bergen-Passaic, N.J.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,067; 
Total Title I funding: $4,814,704. 

EMA: Hartford, Conn.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,059; 
Total Title I funding: $4,552,237. 

EMA: San Antonio, Tex.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 
1,034; 
Total Title I funding: $3,833,443. 

EMA: Cleveland, Ohio.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 970; 
Total Title I funding: $3,486,936. 

EMA: Portland, Oreg.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 937; 
Total Title I funding: $3,567,475. 

EMA: Fort Worth, Tex.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 854; 
Total Title I funding: $3,373,450. 

EMA: Kansas City, Mo.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 822; 
Total Title I funding: $3,240,813. 

EMA: Minneapolis, Minn.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 794; 
Total Title I funding: $3,093,915. 

EMA: Sacramento, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 717; 
Total Title I funding: $2,968,051. 

EMA: Ponce, P.R.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 710; 
Total Title I funding: $2,718,331. 

EMA: Middlesex-Somerset-Hunterdon, N.J.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 682; 
Total Title I funding: $2,723,697. 

EMA: San Jose, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 656; 
Total Title I funding: $2,656,550. 

EMA: Caguas, P.R.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 411; 
Total Title I funding: $1,816,647. 

EMA: Dutchess County, N.Y.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 255; 
Total Title I funding: $1,231,242. 

EMA: Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, N.J.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 238; 
Total Title I funding: $847,898. 

EMA: Santa Rosa, Calif.; 
Number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years: 223; 
Total Title I funding: $1,107,428. 

Total; 
Total Title I funding: $116,306,348. 

Source: GAO analysis of CDC and HRSA data. 

Note: The 5 most recent calendar years are from 1998-2002. 

[End of table]

As discussed earlier, some metropolitan areas are designated as 
emerging communities because their caseloads are not large enough to 
make them eligible for Title I funding as EMAs. However, some emerging 
communities had more reported AIDS cases in the last 5 years than some 
of the EMAs that have been grandfathered.[Footnote 14] For example, for 
fiscal year 2004 Memphis, a designated emerging community, had 1,588 
reported AIDS cases during the most recent 5 calendar years, which is 
more than the number of cases reported in 26 EMAs. This results in 
variability in funding per case caused by grandfathering EMAs. 

Title II Hold-Harmless Funding Could Diminish ADAP Severe Need Grants 
in the Future: 

A Title II hold-harmless provision could diminish ADAP Severe Need 
grant amounts in the future because the provision and the grants are 
funded from the same set-aside of funds. If larger amounts are needed 
to fund the hold-harmless provision in the future, the Severe Need 
grant states could get less than the grant amounts they would otherwise 
receive. 

Fiscal year 2004 was the first time that any states triggered this 
Title II hold-harmless provision, which was established by the 2000 
amendments. Severe Need grants are funded by setting aside three 
percent of the total CARE Act Title II funding for ADAPs.[Footnote 15] 
The Title II hold-harmless provision, also funded by the 3 percent set-
aside for Severe Need grants, guarantees that the total of Title II and 
ADAP base grants made to a state will be at least as large as the 
grants made the previous year. In fiscal year 2004 eight states became 
eligible for this hold-harmless funding. To provide these jurisdictions 
with hold-harmless funding, HRSA officials told us they used funds from 
the 3 percent set-aside for Severe Need grants. In 2004, the 3 percent 
set-aside for Severe Need grants was $22.5 million. Of these funds, 
$1.6 million, or 7 percent, was used to provide this Title II hold-
harmless protection. (See table 6.) The remaining $20.8 million, or 93 
percent of the set-aside amount, was distributed in Severe Need grants. 

Table 6: States that Received Title II Hold-Harmless Funding from 
Severe Need Set-Aside; Fiscal Year 2004: 

State: Arkansas; 
Hold-harmless amount: $23,705. 

State: Kansas; 
Hold-harmless amount: $22,168. 

State: New Mexico; 
Hold-harmless amount: $55,171. 

State: North Dakota; 
Hold-harmless amount: $1,820. 

State: Oklahoma; 
Hold-harmless amount: $96,423. 

State: Tennessee; 
Hold-harmless amount: $1,300,502. 

State: Utah; 
Hold-harmless amount: $119,695. 

State: Vermont; 
Hold-harmless amount: $128. 

State: Total; 
Hold-harmless amount: $1,619,612. 

Source: HRSA. 

[End of table]

The potential exists for this Title II hold-harmless provision to 
diminish the size of Severe Need grants in the future if larger amounts 
are needed to fund the hold-harmless protections. The total amount of 
Severe Need grant funds available in fiscal year 2004 to distribute 
among the eligible states was less than it would have been without the 
hold-harmless deduction. In fiscal year 2004 not all 25 of the states 
eligible for Severe Need grants made the required match in order to 
receive the grant. Consequently, the size of the severe need grants 
received by each state was not less than what they would have received 
if all eligible states made the match. In future years, if all of the 
eligible states make the match, and if there are also states that 
qualify to receive hold-harmless funds, the Severe Need grant states 
would get less than the amounts they would have otherwise received. 

Funding Impact of Using HIV Case Counts Would Depend on the Adequacy of 
HIV Reporting Systems and the Number of Reported HIV Cases: 

If HIV case counts had been used with AIDS case counts in allocating 
Title II base funding, about half of the states would have received 
increased funding and the other half would have received less 
funding.[Footnote 16] Under the 2000 CARE Act reauthorization, HIV case 
counts are required to be included in CARE Act funding formulas no 
later than fiscal year 2007. While all states have established HIV case 
reporting systems, there are currently characteristics of these systems 
that limit the use of HIV case counts in the distribution of CARE Act 
funds. In order to gauge the funding impact of using the data as they 
currently exist, we developed two theoretical approaches for doing so. 
Using these two approaches, we found that some fiscal year 2004 Title 
II base funding would have shifted to southern states if HIV case 
counts had been used with AIDS case counts in the distribution of 
funds.[Footnote 17] We also found that funding would tend to shift to 
jurisdictions with older HIV reporting systems, regardless of their 
location. Changes in funding due to the inclusion of HIV cases would be 
largely offset, at least initially, if the funding formulas retained 
hold-harmless and minimum grant provisions. 

Current HIV Case Reporting Systems Have Limitations for Providing Case 
Counts for Funding Allocations: 

In its 2004 report, IOM identified several limitations in the ability 
of states to provide HIV case counts for use in CARE Act funding 
allocations.[Footnote 18] Among these limitations, IOM found that the 
maturity of HIV case reporting systems varies widely across states. The 
earliest HIV reporting systems were established in Colorado, Minnesota, 
and Wisconsin in 1985, while five jurisdictions implemented their 
systems since 2003. Case reporting systems need time to become fully 
mature and operational, and it takes time to make practitioners aware 
of the requirement to report new HIV cases and the methods for doing 
so. Existing cases also need to be reported and entered into the 
system. States with newer systems may not have collected and entered 
data on existing cases, and, consequently, may underreport the number 
of HIV cases in the state. Underreporting of HIV cases could result in 
jurisdictions receiving less funding than they would be entitled to 
based on the actual number of HIV and AIDS cases. 

IOM also found that differences in how states report HIV case counts to 
CDC could preclude their use in the distribution of CARE Act funds. 
Some state HIV case reporting systems are name-based while others are 
code-based. Currently, CDC will only accept name-based case 
counts.[Footnote 19] Therefore, state-reported HIV cases that use codes 
rather than names would not be counted in allocating CARE Act funds, if 
HIV case counts were used in funding formulas. Twelve states, the 
District of Columbia, and Philadelphia, PA, have some form of a code-
based system rather than a name-based system.[Footnote 20] CDC does not 
accept the code-based data principally because methods have not been 
developed to make certain that a code-reported HIV case is only being 
counted once across all reporting jurisdictions.[Footnote 21] Table 7 
shows whether state HIV case counts are accepted by CDC and the year in 
which each state established its HIV reporting system. 

Table 7: CDC Acceptance of State HIV Case Counts and Year of 
Establishment of State HIV Reporting Systems: 

CDC-accepted: 
Alabama (1988); 
Alaska (1999); 
Arizona (1987); 
Arkansas (1989); 
Colorado (1985); 
Connecticut (2005)[A]; 
Florida (1997); 
Georgia (2004); 
Idaho (1986); 
Indiana (1988); 
Iowa (1998); 
Kansas (1999); 
Kentucky (2004); 
Louisiana (1993); 
Michigan (1992); 
Minnesota (1985); 
Mississippi (1988); 
Missouri (1987); 
Nebraska (1995); 
Nevada (1992); 
New Hampshire (2005)[B]; 
New Jersey (1992); 
New Mexico (1998); 
New York (2000); 
North Carolina (1990); 
North Dakota (1988); 
Ohio (1990); 
Oklahoma (1988); 
Pennsylvania (2002)[C]; 
Puerto Rico (2003); 
South Carolina (1986); 
South Dakota (1988); 
Tennessee (1992); 
Texas (1999); 
Utah (1989); 
Virginia (1989); 
West Virginia (1989); 
Wisconsin (1985); 
Wyoming (1989). 

Not accepted: 
California (2002); 
Delaware (2001); 
District of Columbia (2001); 
Hawaii (2001); 
Illinois (1999); 
Maine (1999); 
Maryland (1994); 
Not accepted: Massachusetts (1998); 
Montana (2000); 
Oregon (2001); 
Rhode Island (2000); 
Vermont (2000); 
Washington (1999). 

Sources: CDC, IOM, Connecticut, Kentucky, and Philadelphia. 

[A] Connecticut established mandatory name-based HIV reporting in 2005. 
Previously, name-based reporting was only required for pediatric cases. 

[B] New Hampshire established mandatory name-based HIV reporting in 
2005. Previously, HIV cases could be reported using the patient name, a 
code, or no identifier at all. 

[C] Name-based HIV reporting has been established in all parts of 
Pennsylvania except Philadelphia. Philadelphia was given permission by 
the state to establish code-based HIV reporting, and the system began 
in 2004, but data from Philadelphia are not accepted by CDC. 

[End of table]

The Use of HIV Case Counts in Funding Formulas Would Change the 
Distribution of CARE Act Funds: 

While we are aware of some of the limitations of HIV data, we used two 
approaches to examine the potential impact of using HIV cases in 
addition to AIDS cases on fiscal year 2004 Title II base grant 
distributions. We conducted this analysis in light of the CARE Act 
requirement that HIV case counts be used for the distribution of Title 
I and Title II formula grants no later than fiscal year 2007. Some CARE 
Act fiscal year 2004 funding would have shifted if HIV and AIDS case 
counts had been used to allocate the funds. Our analyses indicate that 
at most 14 percent of CARE Act Title II base funding would have 
shifted, with southern states being the primary beneficiaries. Changes 
could have resulted from the number of reported HIV cases and AIDS 
cases in each jurisdiction or differences in state HIV case reporting 
systems. However, many of the funding changes in our model would have 
been negated if we had applied hold-harmless and minimum grant 
provisions. 

Methodological Approaches Used: 

We used two approaches to examine the impact of using HIV cases in 
addition to AIDS cases[Footnote 22] on funding for Title II base grants 
in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. We chose 
Title II base grants to illustrate the effect of using HIV case counts 
in funding formulas. Under the first approach, we used HIV case counts 
in addition to AIDS case counts for the 36 jurisdictions from which CDC 
accepted HIV data.[Footnote 23] We then supplemented these data with 
only the AIDS case counts CDC received from the other jurisdictions 
because CDC does not accept their HIV data. Consequently, for some 
states and metropolitan areas we used HIV and AIDS case counts, but for 
others we used only AIDS case counts. This approach reflects the data 
that would be used if funding allocations were based on the HIV and 
AIDS case counts currently received by CDC. Under the second approach, 
we used the same HIV and AIDS case counts for the 36 jurisdictions as 
our first approach, but supplemented these data with the HIV case 
counts collected by the other 15 states and the District of Columbia 
from which CDC did not accept HIV data. We obtained these HIV case 
counts directly from these jurisdictions. For both approaches, we 
calculated the percentage of cases in each jurisdiction and estimated 
the fiscal year 2004 Title II base grant that each would have received. 
Our initial analyses assume that funding was distributed equally per 
AIDS case and that there were no hold-harmless or minimum grant 
provisions. We then estimated the impact of the hold-harmless and 
minimum grant provisions. Although there are limitations associated 
with each of the approaches, they indicate the general impact of using 
HIV and AIDS cases to distribute all CARE Act formula funding. 

Impact on Title II Base Grants: 

Both approaches indicated that there would be some shifting of funds if 
HIV and AIDS case counts had been used to allocate CARE Act Title II 
base grants, with southern jurisdictions generally being among the 
areas that would have received increased funding. Under the first 
approach--using HIV and AIDS cases from 36 jurisdictions and only AIDS 
cases from 16 jurisdictions--about 14 percent or $38.9 million of Title 
II base grants would have shifted among grantees. Twenty-seven grantees 
would have received additional funding in their Title II base grants if 
HIV and AIDS cases had been used to allocate funding instead of just 
AIDS cases. Of the 27 that would have received more funding, 12 were in 
the South. Jurisdictions outside the South that would have received 
more funding include Colorado, New Jersey, and Ohio. All 3 would have 
each received more than $2 million in additional funding. Funding 
increases would have ranged from less than $50,000 in Iowa to almost $5 
million in North Carolina, or from less than 5 to almost 100 percent. 
Twenty-five grantees would have received less funding. California, 
Georgia, and Illinois would have received the largest decreases in 
Title II base grants. Decreases would have ranged from about $100,000 
in Idaho and Wyoming to almost $12 million in California. Percentage 
decreases would have ranged from less than 5 percent in New York to 
almost 80 percent in Montana. 

The second approach--including the code-based HIV counts--yields a 
smaller shift in funding. Under this approach, approximately 10 percent 
or $28.4 million of fiscal year 2004 Title II base grants would have 
shifted. Of the 26 grantees that would have received additional 
funding, 11 are in the South. Funding increases for the 26 grantees 
that would have received additional funding would have ranged from less 
than $50,000 in Maine to about $4 million in North Carolina, or from 5 
percent in Washington to 80 percent in Colorado. Among the states 
benefiting from this funding approach, Maryland, North Carolina, and 
Virginia would each have received increases of more than $2 million. 
Twenty-six grantees would have received less funding. California, New 
York, and Georgia, would have received the largest decreases. Decreases 
would have ranged from less than $50,000 in Iowa to $5 million in 
California. Percentage decreases would have ranged from less than 5 
percent in Florida, Illinois, New Mexico, and Utah to 65 percent in 
North Dakota. Appendix II shows the results of these analyses for each 
state. 

Differences in Case Reporting Systems Would Affect Distributions: 

One explanation for the changes in funding allocations when HIV and 
AIDS cases are used instead of only AIDS cases is the maturity of state 
HIV case reporting systems. We found that those states that would 
benefit from the use of HIV cases tend to be those with the oldest HIV 
case reporting systems. Those states with the oldest reporting systems 
include 11 southern states whose HIV reporting systems were implemented 
prior to 1995. As shown in table 8, states with long histories of 
collecting HIV case counts tend to have many more HIV cases compared 
with their number of AIDS cases than do states with less mature 
reporting systems. This is likely because states with newer systems do 
not have reports on many cases of HIV diagnosed before their reporting 
systems were established.[Footnote 24] This can be illustrated by 
comparing Wisconsin and Delaware, 2 states with similar numbers of AIDS 
cases. Wisconsin began reporting HIV cases in 1985 while Delaware began 
in 2001. As of June 2003, the 909 reported HIV cases in Delaware was 
about 40 percent less than the 1,518 reported AIDS cases. In Wisconsin, 
there were about 50 percent more reported HIV cases and AIDS cases, or 
2,287 HIV cases and 1,507 AIDS cases. This variability could be reduced 
as Delaware identifies more preexisting HIV cases. However, the 
variability between HIV cases and AIDS cases would remain if there was 
a difference in the actual number of HIV cases. 

Table 8: Comparison of Reported HIV and AIDS Cases as of June 2003: 

HIV case reporting system start date: 1985-1991; 
Number of states[A]: 21; 
Ratio of HIV cases to AIDS cases: 1.42. 

HIV case reporting system start date: 1992-1998; 
Number of states[A]: 11; 
Ratio of HIV cases to AIDS cases: 1.01. 

HIV case reporting system start date: 1999-2002; 
Number of states[A]: 17; 
Ratio of HIV cases to AIDS cases: .68. 

Source: GAO analysis of CDC, HRSA, and state data. 

[A] Georgia and Puerto Rico implemented their HIV reporting systems 
after 2002. Kentucky changed from a code-based to a name-based system 
in 2004 and was unable to provide HIV case data. In this table, 
Connecticut is classified as having established its reporting system in 
2001 (and so is included in the 1999-2002 time period) since state 
officials provided us HIV case counts based on the system in operation 
as of June 2003. In this table, New Hampshire is classified as having 
established its reporting system in 1990 (and so is included in the 
1985-1991 time period) because state officials provided us HIV case 
counts based on the system in operation as of June 2003. 

[End of table]

Under either approach, jurisdictions that would receive increased 
funding allocations because of the use of HIV and AIDS case counts 
might do so because other jurisdictions did not yet have an accurate 
measure of HIV case counts. The larger the proportion of HIV cases 
within the total number of HIV and AIDS cases in a jurisdiction, the 
more a jurisdiction would benefit from the use of HIV cases in funding 
allocations. However, this increased funding could simply be the effect 
of a state's older reporting system, and not necessarily due to actual 
differences in the number of HIV cases. IOM has reported that it could 
take from 18 months to several years after the implementation of an HIV 
reporting system before there would be valid estimates of the number of 
people living with HIV. However, table 8 suggests that it could take 
even longer to get accurate case counts. The data in table 8 suggest 
that as an HIV case reporting system matures, it will record a higher 
ratio of HIV cases to AIDS cases. One state official we spoke with said 
that it could take 5 to 6 years before a reporting system's HIV case 
counts were complete. 

Changes in Funding Would be Limited Initially if Certain Formula 
Provisions Were Maintained: 

Changes in funding caused by shifting to HIV cases and AIDS cases would 
be negated, at least initially, if the current hold-harmless or minimum 
grant amounts were maintained. Consider the situation in which a state 
received $2 million in its Title II CARE Act base grant award based on 
its AIDS case count. In the following year, the formula is changed so 
that HIV and AIDS cases are used to determine funding allocations, and 
the state is then only entitled to $1 million. However, there is a hold-
harmless provision that guarantees the state 98 percent of what it 
received the previous year. The state would receive 98 percent of its 
$2 million allocation, or $1.96 million, largely offsetting the 
reduction in funding due to the shift to HIV and AIDS cases. Minimum 
award amounts could also affect the impact of using HIV and AIDS 
counts. If a jurisdiction qualified for $100,000 formula funding using 
HIV and AIDS case counts, but the minimum award was $500,000, the 
jurisdiction would not receive less funding because of the change to 
HIV and AIDS counts. 

Under our first approach, 5 percent of Title II base grants would shift 
among grantees if the hold-harmless and minimum grant provisions were 
maintained while 14 percent would shift if they were not included. 
Under our second approach, 4 percent would shift instead of 10 percent. 
California, which would have had large reductions under both approaches 
if the hold-harmless provision was not maintained, would have had no 
change in funding under either approach if the current hold-harmless 
provisions were maintained. Appendix III shows the results of these 
analyses for each state. 

State ADAP Eligibility Criteria and Funding Sources Vary Widely: 

Among state ADAP programs, there is wide variation in the eligibility 
criteria used to determine who is covered for ADAP services and in the 
funding sources available beyond each state's Title II ADAP base grant. 
States have flexibility in determining their ADAP program eligibility 
standards, including the income eligibility ceilings for ADAP clients, 
caps on spending per client, and the HIV and AIDS drugs included in 
their formulary. As a result, an individual eligible for ADAP services 
in one state may not be eligible in another. There is also wide 
variability in the additional funding sources that ADAPs may receive to 
help fund their programs. Beyond each state's Title II ADAP base grant 
for providing HIV and AIDS medications and related services, additional 
ADAP funding sources may include Title II Severe Need grants, non-
federal transfers of Title II state or Title I EMA funds, state 
contributions, and other funding sources. States with waiting lists for 
ADAP services do not fit any particular pattern of eligibility criteria 
and funding sources. 

Eligibility Criteria Contribute to Coverage Differences Among States: 

States set different eligibility criteria for their ADAP programs, so a 
person with HIV or AIDS at a certain income level and needing 
medication assistance may be an eligible ADAP client in one state, but 
not in another. Eligibility also varies among state Medicaid programs, 
which may provide HIV and AIDS services and drug assistance. The 
interaction between these two programs can affect which clients are 
eligible for ADAP services, and many individuals seeking ADAP coverage 
may not be aware that they are eligible for drug assistance through 
Medicaid. 

One eligibility requirement where there is considerable variation among 
state ADAPs is the client income ceiling. The income ceilings among 52 
state ADAPs for fiscal year 2004 ranged from the most restrictive at 
125 percent of the federal poverty level,[Footnote 25] or $11,638, in 
North Carolina to the most generous at 556 percent, or $51,764, in 
Massachusetts. Eleven states had eligibility ceilings at 200 percent or 
less of the poverty level. 

Another eligibility criterion where there is wide variation among state 
ADAPs is the number of HIV and AIDS drugs covered under a state 
program's drug formulary. The number of drugs included in ADAP 
formularies in fiscal year 2004 varied widely from Colorado with 20 
drugs to four state ADAPs--Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, 
and Washington--with open drug formularies.[Footnote 26] Thirty-nine 
ADAPs had 100 or fewer drugs, including 15 with fewer than 50 drugs on 
their formularies. The CARE Act allows states to purchase health 
insurance to cover HIV and AIDS drugs for their clients. HRSA requires 
an ADAP to demonstrate that the insurance includes coverage for drugs 
comparable to those on the state's ADAP formulary.[Footnote 27]

Determining whether an individual is eligible for state ADAP or state 
Medicaid services is important because the ADAPs serve as the 
individual's HIV and AIDS drug assistance program of last resort. 
Medicaid programs provide HIV and AIDS health care services, including 
medications, to eligible disabled individuals with low incomes. If an 
individual is eligible for a state's Medicaid drug assistance, the 
state ADAP should not provide the same services under its program. 
Twenty-three ADAPs reported requiring clients to have been denied 
Medicaid eligibility before the ADAP will cover them. To ensure that a 
prospective or current ADAP client is not eligible to be served by 
Medicaid, 42 of the 52 state ADAPs reported in ADAP grant year 
2004[Footnote 28] that they used a case manager review process to 
monitor an ADAP client's Medicaid eligibility, and 40 of the 52 ADAPs 
also reported using computer access to eligibility determinations to 
verify a client's Medicaid and ADAP eligibility. 

Because it is important to ensure continuing therapy for HIV and AIDS 
clients once they begin taking medications, states may limit the number 
of ADAP clients they serve to prevent a budget shortfall. This could 
result in eligible clients being on an ADAP waiting list. States also 
use a variety of ADAP eligibility restrictions to limit the number of 
clients they serve. Of the 52 state ADAPs, 36 reported eligibility 
restrictions for ADAP grant year 2004, and 20 of the 36 used more than 
one. The restrictions most used were (1) an annual cap on individual 
incomes by 20 ADAPs, (2) a limitation on an individual's assets by 16 
ADAPs, (3) capping ADAP enrollment by 7 ADAPs, (4) sliding scale 
copayments paid by individuals by 7 ADAPs, and (5) capping the amount 
expended per client for all HIV and AIDS drugs by 6 ADAPs. Appendix IV 
provides a state-by-state summary of the reported restrictions. 

A Large Percentage of ADAPs' Funds Received from Sources Other than the 
ADAP Base Grant: 

In addition to their Title II ADAP base grants, 46 of the 52 states 
ADAPs received funding from other sources for their programs in fiscal 
year 2004. There were five sources of additional funding across these 
46 state ADAPs: (1) $20.8 million in Title II Severe Need grants 
(including $4.5 million in state match funds), (2) $26.9 million from 
Title II state funding transfers, (3) $10.9 million from Title I EMA 
funding transfers, (4) $194.8 million in state contributions, and (5) 
$169.3 million in other funds. When the additional funding source 
totals are compared among states as a percentage of the ADAP's CARE Act 
base grant, and as an amount per AIDS case, there is a significant 
range among the states. Appendix V provides a state-by-state summary of 
additional ADAP funding and the base grant and per AIDS case 
comparisons. 

State ADAPs that received funding from sources other than their Title 
II base grant award include: 

* Sixteen of the 25 states eligible for ADAP Severe Need grants 
received grant amounts ranging from about $37,000 in Montana to about 
$6 million in Texas. States eligible for these grants must agree to 
match 25 percent of the funds.[Footnote 29]

* Eighteen ADAPs reported receiving transfers from their states' Title 
II base grants ranging from about $65,000 in Maryland to $12.2 million 
in California. 

* Nine of the 24 states with EMAs reported receiving Title I fund 
transfers from their EMAs for their ADAPs ranging from more than 
$65,000 for Nevada to about $6 million for New York. 

* Thirty-five ADAPs reported receiving state contributions from their 
states ranging from about $8,000 in Ohio to about $64 million in 
California. 

* Thirty-two ADAPs reported other funding sources ranging from about 
$7,000 in Montana to $64.5 million in New York. Other funding sources 
include additional funds from drug rebates[Footnote 30] and HRSA 
approved carryover of ADAP CARE Act funds from one year to the next. 

Among states with additional funding sources, there is a significant 
range in amounts per AIDS case and percentages of the ADAP base grants. 
The highest amount of additional funding received per AIDS case was 
$3,604, or 171 percent of the base grant in Idaho and the lowest was 
$61 per AIDS case, or 3 percent of the base grant in the District of 
Columbia. ADAPs in six states did not receive any additional funding--
Iowa, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Tennessee, Utah, and Wyoming. 

Eligibility Criteria and Funding Sources Also Vary Among States with 
Waiting Lists: 

During fiscal years 2002 through 2004, some states had people eligible 
for their ADAPs' services on waiting lists and the states with ADAP 
waiting lists have remained relatively static in fiscal years 2002 
through 2004. Sixteen, or about one-third, of the 52 states had ADAP 
waiting lists for at least 1 month during these 3 years. Seven of the 
16 states had ADAP waiting lists in all 3 years. (See table 9.)

Table 9: States with ADAP Waiting Lists in at Least 1 Month of a Fiscal 
Year, Fiscal Years 2002-04: 

1; State: Alabama; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

2; State: Alaska; 
FY2003; FY2004. 

3; State: Arkansas; 
FY2004. 

4; State: Colorado; 
FY2003; FY2004. 

5; State: Georgia; 
FY2002. 

6; State: Idaho; 
FY2003; FY2004. 

7; State: Indiana; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

8; State: Iowa; 
FY2004. 

9; State: Kentucky; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

10; State: Montana; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

11; State: Nebraska; 
FY2003; FY2004. 

12; State: North Carolina; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

13; State: Oregon; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

14; State: South Dakota; 
FY2002; FY2003; FY2004. 

15; State: West Virginia; 
FY2003; FY2004. 

16; State: Wyoming; FY2003. 

Total; 
FY2002: 8; 
FY2003: 13; 
FY2004: 14. 

Source: HRSA and GAO analysis. 

[End of table]

The funding sources and eligibility criteria for states with waiting 
lists have varied just as considerably as for states without waiting 
lists, and there is no clear pattern between a state's funding sources 
or eligibility criteria and the existence of a waiting list. While 33 
states that received additional funds did not have an ADAP waiting list 
in 2004, 13 of the 14 states with waiting lists also received 
additional funding beyond their ADAP base grant. For example, for: 

* Title II Severe Need grants: Eight of the 16 states that received 
Severe Need grants had waiting lists. Three of the 9 eligible states 
that did not apply for Severe Need grants in 2004--Alaska, Iowa, and 
South Dakota--also had ADAP waiting lists. 

* Title I EMA transfers: One state ADAP of the nine that received a 
Title I transfer--Colorado--had an ADAP waiting list. 

* Title II state transfers: Eight of the 18 ADAPs receiving Title II 
transfers had waiting lists. 

* State funds: Nine of the 35 ADAPs that received state funds had 
waiting lists. 

* Other funding: Of the 32 ADAPs reporting other funding sources, 10 
had ADAP waiting lists. 

Of the 14 states with ADAP waiting lists, 5 were among the top 10 for 
additional funding per AIDS case received--Idaho (1), South Dakota (2), 
Oregon (3), North Carolina (7), and Colorado (8). The remaining 9 
states with waiting lists and their per AIDS case ranks were Montana 
(12), Alabama (18), Nebraska (23), Indiana (24), West Virginia (28), 
Kentucky (33), Arkansas (34), Alaska (42), and Iowa with no additional 
funds. 

There also seems to be no clear pattern between eligibility criteria--
such as a low income eligibility ceiling or a limited drug formulary--
and a waiting list of clients that a state ADAP deems eligible but is 
unable to serve. For example, for: 

* Client income eligibility levels: North Carolina with the most 
restrictive level at 125 percent of the poverty level had a waiting 
list, and Massachusetts with the most generous level at 556 percent had 
no waiting list. 

* Eligibility restrictions: Among the seven ADAPs that capped their 
ADAP enrollment, six had waiting lists. Five ADAPs that capped the 
amount they expend per client for all HIV and AIDS drugs included two 
states with waiting lists. 

* Drug formularies: Among the 39 ADAPs with 100 or fewer drugs on their 
formularies, 13 had waiting lists. 

When eligible clients are on state ADAP waiting lists, there are 
limited medication assistance options available to help them until they 
can be served by the ADAP. HRSA officials told us that case managers, 
who are not ADAP employees, are to assist ADAP-eligible clients in 
accessing options to act as stopgaps until clients can be provided ADAP 
services. Among the options are pharmaceutical manufacturers' patient 
assistance programs that provide free or cost-reduced drugs and non-
ADAP pharmacy assistance programs provided by some EMAs using their 
Title I funds.[Footnote 31]

Concluding Observations: 

The services provided under the Care Act have filled important gaps in 
communities throughout the country, but as Congress reviews this act, 
we believe it is important to understand how variable this funding can 
be. Today I have highlighted a few of the issues that are relevant to 
this review. For each of these issues, we found that the provisions of 
the CARE Act have impacted the extent to which funds have been 
distributed in proportion to the incidence of HIV and AIDS. It is clear 
that the level of funding available per case is quite variable 
depending upon where an individual lives. The way cases from EMAs are 
counted twice, the tiered allocation of funds to Emerging Communities, 
the hold-harmless provisions, and the grandfathering of EMAs have all 
resulted in considerably more funding going to some communities than 
others with equivalent numbers of cases. The inclusion of HIV cases in 
the funding formulas, while improving on the basis for funding 
allocations by reflecting cases that have not progressed to AIDS, would 
also result in variable funding depending upon the type and maturity of 
the reporting system used in each state. In addition, the flexibility 
given to states to shift funds, establish eligibility criteria, place 
limits on the medications covered, and cap enrollment, has resulted in 
great variability for ADAP services depending upon where an individual 
lives. 

Mr. Chairman, this completes my prepared statement. I would be happy to 
respond to any questions you or other members of the subcommittee may 
have at this time. 

Contact and Acknowledgments: 

For future contacts regarding this testimony, please call Marcia Crosse 
at (202) 512-7118. Other individuals who made key contributions include 
Robert Copeland, Louise Duhamel, Cathy Hamann, James McClyde, Opal 
Winebrenner, and Craig Winslow. 

[End of section]

Appendix I: Combined CARE Act Title I and Title II Funding by State, 
Fiscal Year 2004: 

State/territory: Alabama; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $12,142,447; 
AIDS cases: 3,320; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,657. 

State/territory: Alaska[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $974,705; 
AIDS cases: 224; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,351. 

State/territory: Arizona; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $18,635,537; 
AIDS cases: 3,978; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 73.5%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,685. 

State/territory: Arkansas; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $4,933,831; 
AIDS cases: 1,466; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,366. 

State/territory: California; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $223,607,373; 
AIDS cases: 42,479; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 88.9%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,264. 

State/territory: Colorado; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $12,949,158; 
AIDS cases: 2,658; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 75.0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,872. 

State/territory: Connecticut; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $26,797,308; 
AIDS cases: 5,363; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 91.4%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,997. 

State/territory: Delaware; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $5,340,795; 
AIDS cases: 1,518; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,518. 

State/territory: District of Columbia; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $33,288,417; 
AIDS cases: 6,561; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 100.0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,074. 

State/territory: Florida; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $182,771,752; 
AIDS cases: 38,101; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 77.3%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,797. 

State/territory: Georgia; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $54,483,301; 
AIDS cases: 11,226; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 67.6%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,853. 

State/territory: Hawaii; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $3,298,130; 
AIDS cases: 988; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,338. 

State/territory: Idaho[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $1,019,352; 
AIDS cases: 220; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,633. 

State/territory: Illinois; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $60,837,359; 
AIDS cases: 12,203; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 87.9%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,985. 

State/territory: Indiana; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $11,402,950; 
AIDS cases: 3,095; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,684. 

State/territory: Iowa; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $2,067,375; 
AIDS cases: 619; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,340. 

State/territory: Kansas; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $3,881,999; 
AIDS cases: 959; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 34.2%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,048. 

State/territory: Kentucky; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $7,170,005; 
AIDS cases: 1,937; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,702. 

State/territory: Louisiana; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $29,740,454; 
AIDS cases: 6,555; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 48.1%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,537. 

State/territory: Maine[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $1,333,909; 
AIDS cases: 395; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,377. 

State/territory: Maryland; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $61,230,030; 
AIDS cases: 12,203; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 93.6%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,018. 

State/territory: Massachusetts; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $34,432,147; 
AIDS cases: 6,960; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 83.2%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,947. 

State/territory: Michigan; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $24,046,130; 
AIDS cases: 5,215; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 68.8%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,611. 

State/territory: Minnesota; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $7,139,028; 
AIDS cases: 1,427; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 88.7%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,003. 

State/territory: Mississippi; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $9,454,950; 
AIDS cases: 2,747; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,442. 

State/territory: Missouri; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $16,501,234; 
AIDS cases: 3,512; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 76.8%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,699. 

State/territory: Montana[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $847,196; 
AIDS cases: 147; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,763. 

State/territory: Nebraska; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $1,887,660; 
AIDS cases: 525; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,596. 

State/territory: Nevada; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $10,757,214; 
AIDS cases: 2,246; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 83.3%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,789. 

State/territory: New Hampshire[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $1,864,452; 
AIDS cases: 358; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 69.0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,208. 

State/territory: New Jersey; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $80,222,837; 
AIDS cases: 16,531; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 84.8%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,853. 

State/territory: New Mexico; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $3,338,463; 
AIDS cases: 982; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,400. 

State/territory: New York; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $298,549,361; 
AIDS cases: 59,226; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 88.6%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $5,041. 

State/territory: North Carolina; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $22,668,734; 
AIDS cases: 6,083; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0.1%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,727. 

State/territory: North Dakota[B]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $292,543; 
AIDS cases: 43; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $6,803. 

State/territory: Ohio; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $20,249,202; 
AIDS cases: 5,171; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 29.2%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,916. 

State/territory: Oklahoma; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $6,343,022; 
AIDS cases: 1,687; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,760. 

State/territory: Oregon; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $9,084,990; 
AIDS cases: 2,003; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 68.9%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,536. 

State/territory: Pennsylvania; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $59,766,256; 
AIDS cases: 12,840; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 67.4%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,655. 

State/territory: Puerto Rico; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $53,026,882; 
AIDS cases: 10,711; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 79.9%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,951. 

State/territory: Rhode Island; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $3,189,276; 
AIDS cases: 906; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,520. 

State/territory: South Carolina; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $20,705,328; 
AIDS cases: 5,563; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,722. 

State/territory: South Dakota[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $705,706; 
AIDS cases: 97; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $7,275. 

State/territory: Tennessee; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $21,178,234; 
AIDS cases: 5,080; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,169. 

State/territory: Texas; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $118,965,938; 
AIDS cases: 23,922; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 74.5%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,973. 

State/territory: Utah; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $3,235,191; 
AIDS cases: 882; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,668. 

State/territory: Vermont[A]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $883,059; 
AIDS cases: 181; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,879. 

State/territory: Virginia; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $32,149,863; 
AIDS cases: 6,872; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 63.2%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,678. 

State/territory: Washington; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $17,349,313; 
AIDS cases: 3,776; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 69.8%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,595. 

State/territory: West Virginia; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $2,335,062; 
AIDS cases: 618; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 11.3%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,778. 

State/territory: Wisconsin; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $5,603,506; 
AIDS cases: 1,507; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0.4%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $3,718. 

State/territory: Wyoming[B]; 
Combined Title I and Title II awards: $360,347; 
AIDS cases: 76; 
Percent of AIDS cases in EMAs: 0%; 
Total Title I and Title II awards per AIDS case: $4,741. 

Sources: GAO analysis of HRSA data. 

[A] State received a Title II base award of $500,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[B] State received a Title II base award of $200,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix II: Estimated Funding Changes Using HIV and AIDS Cases without 
Hold-Harmless and Minimum Grant Provisions: 

State/territory: Alabama; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,480,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 61%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,950,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 48%. 

State/territory: Alaska[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$270,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -55%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$290,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -58%. 

State/territory: Arizona; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,220,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 38%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$810,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 25%. 

State/territory: Arkansas; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$840,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 47%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$630,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 35%. 

State/territory: California; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$11,790,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -38%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$5,020,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -16%. 

State/territory: Colorado; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,090,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 99%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,700,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 80%. 

State/territory: Connecticut; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,360,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -36%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,420,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -38%. 

State/territory: Delaware; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$750,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -41%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$230,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -13%. 

State/territory: District of Columbia; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,520,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -35%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,800,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -42%. 

State/territory: Florida; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,920,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 10%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$150,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -1%. 

State/territory: Georgia; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$3,550,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -38%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$4,090,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -43%. 

State/territory: Hawaii; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$490,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -41%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$180,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -15%. 

State/territory: Idaho[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$80,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$120,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -24%. 

State/territory: Illinois; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$3,210,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -36%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$70,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -1%. 

State/territory: Indiana; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,170,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 31%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$760,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 20%. 

State/territory: Iowa; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$20,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 2%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$40,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 6%. 

State/territory: Kansas; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$210,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 21%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$110,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -11%. 

State/territory: Kentucky; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$960,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -41%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,070,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -45%. 

State/territory: Louisiana; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,070,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 33%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,340,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 22%. 

State/territory: Maine[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$210,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -43%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$40,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 9%. 

State/territory: Maryland; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$3,030,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -36%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$3,000,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 35%. 

State/territory: Massachusetts; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,920,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -37%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$510,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 10%. 

State/territory: Michigan; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,160,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 27%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$660,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 15%. 

State/territory: Minnesota; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$660,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 64%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$500,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 49%. 

State/territory: Mississippi; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,580,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 47%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,180,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 35%. 

State/territory: Missouri; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,260,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 45%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$880,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 32%. 

State/territory: Montana[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$390,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -79%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$170,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -34%. 

State/territory: Nebraska; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$140,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 23%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$80,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: Nevada; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$830,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 50%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$600,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 35%. 

State/territory: New Hampshire[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$310,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -63%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$122,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -24%. 

State/territory: New Jersey; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,510,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 20%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,120,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 9%. 

State/territory: New Mexico; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$50,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$60,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -5%. 

State/territory: New York; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$600,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -1%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$4,640,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -11%. 

State/territory: North Carolina; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$4,910,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 66%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$3,910,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 53%. 

State/territory: North Dakota[B]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$124,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -62%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$130,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -65%. 

State/territory: Ohio; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,360,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 43%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,700,00; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 31%. 

State/territory: Oklahoma; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$980,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 48%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$730,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 36%. 

State/territory: Oregon; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$630,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -38%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$290,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%. 

State/territory: Pennsylvania; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$2,370,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -22%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$3,120,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -29%. 

State/territory: Puerto Rico; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$2,970,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -36%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$3,460,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -42%. 

State/territory: Rhode Island; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$450,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -41%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$180,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -16%. 

State/territory: South Carolina; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,280,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 34%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,540,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 23%. 

State/territory: South Dakota[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$290,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -58%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$310,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -62%. 

State/territory: Tennessee; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,160,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 35%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,480,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 24%. 

State/territory: Texas; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$840,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,010,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -5%. 

State/territory: Utah; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$40,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$50,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -5%. 

State/territory: Vermont[A]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$370,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -74%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$260,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -53%. 

State/territory: Virginia; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$3,040,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 51%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,260,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 38%. 

State/territory: Washington; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,170,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -38%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$160,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 5%. 

State/territory: West Virginia; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$170,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 24%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$90,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: Wisconsin; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$910,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 50%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$690,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 37%. 

State/territory: Wyoming[B]; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$90,000; 
Change in Title II case funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -47%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$100,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -51. 

Sources: GAO analysis of CDC and HRSA data for fiscal year 2004. 

Notes: Rounded to nearest $10,000. For this testimony, we chose Title 
II base grants to illustrate the effect of using HIV case counts in 
funding formulas. 

[A] State received a Title II base award of $500,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[B] State received a Title II base award of $200,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: Estimated Funding Changes Using HIV and AIDS Cases with 
Hold-Harmless and Minimum Grant Provisions: 

State/territory: Alabama; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,120,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 28%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$960,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 24%. 

State/territory: Alaska[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Arizona; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$610,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 19%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$410,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: Arkansas; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$290,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$230,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: California; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Colorado; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,530,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 72%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,340,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 63%. 

State/territory: Connecticut; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$150,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$150,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%. 

State/territory: Delaware; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$410,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -22%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$410,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -22%. 

State/territory: District of Columbia; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$940,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -22%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$940,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -22%. 

State/territory: Florida; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,380,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -5%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$2,930,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -10%. 

State/territory: Georgia; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,350,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -14%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,350,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -14%. 

State/territory: Hawaii; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$70,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$70,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: Idaho[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Illinois; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,780,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -20%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$790,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -9%. 

State/territory: Indiana; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$130,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$20,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 1%. 

State/territory: Iowa; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$90,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -11%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$90,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -11%. 

State/territory: Kansas; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Kentucky; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$400,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$400,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%. 

State/territory: Louisiana; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$660,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 11%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$370,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 6%. 

State/territory: Maine[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Maryland; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,650,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -20%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,050,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 24%. 

State/territory: Massachusetts; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$620,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -12%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$10,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Michigan; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$350,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 8%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$120,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 3%. 

State/territory: Minnesota; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$460,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 45%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$370,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 36%. 

State/territory: Mississippi; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$550,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$430,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: Missouri; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$710,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 26%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$530,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 19%. 

State/territory: Montana[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Nebraska; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$20,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -3%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$40,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: Nevada; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$520,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 31%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$390,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 23%. 

State/territory: New Hampshire[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: New Jersey; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$600,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 5%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: New Mexico; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$70,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$70,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: New York; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,730,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,730,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%. 

State/territory: North Carolina; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,340,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 32%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$2,050,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 28%. 

State/territory: North Dakota[B]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$300,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 150%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$300,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 150%. 

State/territory: Ohio; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$890,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 16%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$660,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 12%. 

State/territory: Oklahoma; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$340,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$270,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 13%. 

State/territory: Oregon; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$130,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -8%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$130,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -8%. 

State/territory: Pennsylvania; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,840,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,840,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -17%. 

State/territory: Puerto Rico; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$320,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$320,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -4%. 

State/territory: Rhode Island; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$30,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -2%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$30,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -2%. 

State/territory: South Carolina; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$390,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 6%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$180,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 3%. 

State/territory: South Dakota[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Tennessee; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$420,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 7%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$220,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 4%. 

State/territory: Texas; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,140,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$1,140,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: Utah; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$60,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$60,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: Vermont[A]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: $0; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 0%. 

State/territory: Virginia; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,510,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 26%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$1,200,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 20%. 

State/territory: Washington; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$200,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -7%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$180,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -6%. 

State/territory: West Virginia; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$13,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -2%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: -
$40,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: -5%. 

State/territory: Wisconsin; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$340,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 18%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$270,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 15%. 

State/territory: Wyoming[B]; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$300,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if CDC-accepted HIV case counts and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 150%; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Dollar change: 
$300,000; 
Change in Title II base funding if HIV case counts from all states and 
AIDS case counts were used to distribute funding: Percent change: 150%. 

Sources: GAO analysis of CDC and HRSA data for fiscal year 2004. 

Notes: Rounded to nearest $10,000. For this testimony, we chose Title 
II base grants to illustrate the effect of using HIV case counts in 
funding formulas. 

[A] State received a Title II base award of $500,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[B] State received a Title II base award of $200,000, the minimum it 
could receive based on the number of AIDS cases in the state. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix IV: ADAP Program Eligibility Restrictions Reported by 52 
ADAPs, ADAP Grant Year 2004: 

ADAPs: Alabama; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Alaska; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Arizona; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Arkansas; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: California; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Colorado; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Asset limitation, Annual income cap, 
Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures or had wait lists or both for protease 
inhibitor drugs. 

ADAPs: Connecticut; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Delaware; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: District of Columbia; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Florida; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Georgia; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Hawaii; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: Idaho; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per 
patient. 

ADAPs: Illinois; 
Restrictions: Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per patient. 

ADAPs: Indiana; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Iowa; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Kansas; 
Restrictions: Fixed copayment. 

ADAPs: Kentucky; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Louisiana; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: Maine; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Maryland; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Massachusetts; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Michigan; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Minnesota; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Mississippi; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Missouri; 
Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per patient. 

ADAPs: Montana; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment. 

ADAPs: Nebraska; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Nevada; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: New Hampshire; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: New Jersey; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: New Mexico; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: New York; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation, Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: North Carolina; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures or had 
wait lists or both for protease inhibitor drugs. 

ADAPs: North Dakota; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Ohio; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Oklahoma; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per 
patient. 

ADAPs: Oregon; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Asset limitation, Annual income 
cap. 

ADAPs: Pennsylvania; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: Puerto Rico; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Rhode Island; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap. 

ADAPs: South Carolina; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment. 

ADAPs: South Dakota; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment, Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per 
patient. 

ADAPs: Tennessee; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: Texas; 
Restrictions: Fixed copayment. 

ADAPs: Utah; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: Vermont; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Virginia; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Washington; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment, Asset limitation. 

ADAPs: West Virginia; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Wisconsin; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Wyoming; 
Restrictions: None. 

ADAPs: Total; 
Restrictions: Capped enrollment: 7; 
Restrictions: Fixed copayment: 2; 
Restrictions: Sliding scale copayment: 7; 
Restrictions: Asset limitation: 16; 
Restrictions: Annual income cap: 20; 
Restrictions: Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures per patient: 5; 
Restrictions: Capped HIV/AIDS expenditures or had wait lists or both 
for protease inhibitor drugs: 2. 

Source: HRSA and state ADAP profile reports. 

Note: The ADAP 2004 grant year covers April 1, 2004, through March 31, 
2005. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix V: Additional ADAP Funding and its Percentage of the CARE Act 
Title II ADAP Base Grants and per AIDS Case by State: 

Table 14: Additional ADAP Funding Sources, Fiscal Year 2004: 

State ADAP: Alabama; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $824,913; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$206,228; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $2,500,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $3,531,141. 

State ADAP: Alaska; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $50,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $50,000. 

State ADAP: Arizona; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $1,000,000; 
Other funding sources: $78,546; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,078,546. 

State ADAP: Arkansas; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $330,810; 
Other funding sources: $393,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $723,810. 

State ADAP: California; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $12,168,628; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $63,934,245; 
Other funding sources: $47,370,750; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $123,473,623. 

State ADAP: Colorado; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $660,427; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$165,107; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $136,000; 
Title I EMA transfer: $560,254; 
State funding: $934,134; 
Other funding sources: $3,212,522; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,668,444. 

State ADAP: Connecticut; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $606,678; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $606,678. 

State ADAP: Delaware; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $832,382; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $832,382. 

State ADAP: D.C; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $400,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $400,000. 

State ADAP: Florida; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $1,916,336; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $9,000,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $10,916,336. 

State ADAP: Georgia; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $2,789,298; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$697,324; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $1,540,022; 
State funding: $11,305,339; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $16,331,983. 

State ADAP: Hawaii; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $440,535; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $440,535. 

State ADAP: Idaho; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $54,663; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$13,666; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $261,150; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $163,461; 
Other funding sources: $300,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $792,940. 

State ADAP: Illinois; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $7,000,000; 
Other funding sources: $5,619,843; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $12,619,843. 

State ADAP: Indiana; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $2,720,419; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $102,331; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,822,750. 

State ADAP: Iowa; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: Kansas; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $400,000; 
Other funding sources: $550,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $950,000. 

State ADAP: Kentucky; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $481,282; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$120,320; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $100,000; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $90,000; 
Other funding sources: $199,462; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $991,064. 

State ADAP: Louisiana; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $1,628,705; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$407,176; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $422,638; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,458,519. 

State ADAP: Maine; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $57,638; 
Other funding sources: $125,327; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $182,965. 

State ADAP: Maryland; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $65,250; 
Title I EMA transfer: $105,925; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $2,100,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,271,175. 

State ADAP: Massachusetts; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $104,819; 
State funding: $747,990; 
Other funding sources: $1,900,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,788,809. 

State ADAP: Michigan; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $5,500,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,500,000. 

State ADAP: Minnesota; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $1,100,000; 
Other funding sources: $2,743,522; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $3,843,522. 

State ADAP: Mississippi; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $1,093,008; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $750,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,843,008. 

State ADAP: Missouri; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $771,167; 
Title I EMA transfer: $1,549,422; 
State funding: $669,000; 
Other funding sources: $1,913,547; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $4,921,136. 

State ADAP: Montana; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $36,525; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$9,131; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $178,548; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $7,120; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $231,324. 

State ADAP: Nebraska; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $130,445; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$32,611; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $74,000; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $115,938; 
Other funding sources: $160,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $512,994. 

State ADAP: Nevada; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $65,250; 
State funding: $1,350,947; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,416,197. 

State ADAP: New Hampshire; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: New Jersey; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $13,050,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $13,050,000. 

State ADAP: New Mexico; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: New York; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $2,524,145; 
Title I EMA transfer: $5,870,000; 
State funding: $33,000,000; 
Other funding sources: $64,500,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $105,894,145. 

State ADAP: North Carolina; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $1,511,429; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$377,857; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $8,355,195; 
Other funding sources: $3,338,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $13,582,481. 

State ADAP: North Dakota; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $85,400; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $32,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $117,400. 

State ADAP: Ohio; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $300,000; 
State funding: $7,843; 
Other funding sources: $20,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $327,843. 

State ADAP: Oklahoma; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $419,165; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$104,791; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $486,486; 
Title I EMA transfer: $NA; 
State funding: $786,000; 
Other funding sources: $361,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,157,442. 

State ADAP: Oregon; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $300,000; 
Other funding sources: $5,650,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,950,000. 

State ADAP: Pennsylvania; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $10,452,000; 
Other funding sources: $6,044,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $16,496,000. 

State ADAP: Puerto Rico; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $2,661,337; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0[A]; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $3,455,671; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $2,093,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $8,210,008. 

State ADAP: Rhode Island; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $700,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $700,000. 

State ADAP: South Carolina; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $1,382,225; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$345,556; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $500,000; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,227,781. 

State ADAP: South Dakota; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $330,744; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $330,744. 

State ADAP: Tennessee; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: Texas; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $5,943,843; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$1,485,961; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $500,000; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $28,538,504; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $36,468,308. 

State ADAP: Utah; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: Vermont; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $0; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$0; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $175,000; 
Other funding sources: $130,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $305,000. 

State ADAP: Virginia; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $1,707,470; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$426,867; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $0; 
State funding: $2,612,200; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $4,746,537. 

State ADAP: Washington; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: $800,487; 
State funding: $4,842,484; 
Other funding sources: $925,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $6,567,971. 

State ADAP: West Virginia; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $153,553; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$38,388; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $75,000; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $180,000; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $446,941. 

State ADAP: Wisconsin; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $374,441; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$93,610; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $186,658; 
Other funding sources: $855,317; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,510,026. 

State ADAP: Wyoming; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: State was not 
eligible for a grant; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
State was not eligible for a grant; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $0; 
Title I EMA transfer: State did not have an EMA; 
State funding: $0; 
Other funding sources: $0; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0. 

State ADAP: Total; 
Title II Severe Need grant: ADAP Severe Need grant: $20,759,721; 
Title II Severe Need grant: State matching funds for Severe Need grant: 
$4,524,593; 
Title II non-ADAP base grant transfer: $26,941,952; 
Title I EMA transfer: $10,932,179; 
State funding: $194,795,599; 
Other funding sources: $169,334,307; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $427,288,351. 

Source: HRSA and GAO analysis. 

A State was not eligible for a grant. 

B State did not have an EMA. 

[A] Puerto Rico is not required to provide match funds. 

[End of table]

Table 11: Additional ADAP Funding as Percentage of ADAP Base Grant and 
per AIDS Case, Fiscal Year 2004: 

State ADAP: Alabama; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $3,531,141; 
ADAP base grant: $7,004,635; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
50%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,064. 

State ADAP: Alaska; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $50,000; 
ADAP base grant: $472,602; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
11%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $223. 

State ADAP: Arizona; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,078,546; 
ADAP base grant: $8,392,903; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
13%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $271. 

State ADAP: Arkansas; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $723,810; 
ADAP base grant: $3,116,716; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
23%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $494. 

State ADAP: California; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $123,473,623; 
ADAP base grant: $89,623,465; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
138%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,907. 

State ADAP: Colorado; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,668,444; 
ADAP base grant: $5,607,928; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
101%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,133. 

State ADAP: Connecticut; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $606,678; 
ADAP base grant: $11,315,018; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 5%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $113. 

State ADAP: Delaware; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $832,382; 
ADAP base grant: $3,202,722; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
26%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $548. 

State ADAP: D.C; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $400,000; 
ADAP base grant: $13,842,594; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 3%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $61. 

State ADAP: Florida; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $10,916,336; 
ADAP base grant: $80,386,630; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
14%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $287. 

State ADAP: Georgia; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $16,331,983; 
ADAP base grant: $23,684,951; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
69%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,455. 

State ADAP: Hawaii; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $440,535; 
ADAP base grant: $2,084,512; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
21%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $446. 

State ADAP: Idaho; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $792,940; 
ADAP base grant: $464,163; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
171%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $3,604. 

State ADAP: Illinois; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $12,619,843; 
ADAP base grant: $25,746,254; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
49%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,034. 

State ADAP: Indiana; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,822,750; 
ADAP base grant: $6,529,924; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
43%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $912. 

State ADAP: Iowa; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $1,305,985; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

State ADAP: Kansas; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $950,000; 
ADAP base grant: $2,045,495; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
46%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $991. 

State ADAP: Kentucky; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $991,064; 
ADAP base grant: $4,086,741; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
24%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $512. 

State ADAP: Louisiana; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,458,519; 
ADAP base grant: $13,829,935; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
18%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $375. 

State ADAP: Maine; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $182,965; 
ADAP base grant: $833,383; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
22%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $463. 

State ADAP: Maryland; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,271,175; 
ADAP base grant: $25,746,254; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 9%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $186. 

State ADAP: Massachusetts; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,788,809; 
ADAP base grant: $14,684,416; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
19%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $401. 

State ADAP: Michigan; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,500,000; 
ADAP base grant: $11,002,763; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
50%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,055. 

State ADAP: Minnesota; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $3,843,522; 
ADAP base grant: $3,010,727; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
128%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,693. 

State ADAP: Mississippi; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,843,008; 
ADAP base grant: $5,795,703; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
32%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $671. 

State ADAP: Missouri; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $4,921,136; 
ADAP base grant: $7,409,723; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
66%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,401. 

State ADAP: Montana; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $231,324; 
ADAP base grant: $310,145; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
75%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,574. 

State ADAP: Nebraska; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $512,994; 
ADAP base grant: $1,107,661; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
46%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $977. 

State ADAP: Nevada; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,416,197; 
ADAP base grant: $4,738,678; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
30%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $631. 

State ADAP: New Hampshire; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $755,319; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

State ADAP: New Jersey; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $13,050,000; 
ADAP base grant: $34,877,598; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
37%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $789. 

State ADAP: New Mexico; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $2,127,024; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

State ADAP: New York; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $105,894,145; 
ADAP base grant: $124,956,784; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
85%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,788. 

State ADAP: North Carolina; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $13,582,481; 
ADAP base grant: $12,834,095; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
106%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,233. 

State ADAP: North Dakota; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $117,400; 
ADAP base grant: $92,543; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
127%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,730. 

State ADAP: Ohio; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $327,843; 
ADAP base grant: $10,909,930; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 3%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $63. 

State ADAP: Oklahoma; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,157,442; 
ADAP base grant: $3,655,707; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
59%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,279. 

State ADAP: Oregon; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $5,950,000; 
ADAP base grant: $4,225,989; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
141%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $2,971. 

State ADAP: Pennsylvania; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $16,496,000; 
ADAP base grant: $27,090,216; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
61%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,285. 

State ADAP: Puerto Rico; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $8,210,008; 
ADAP base grant: $22,598,388; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
36%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $767. 

State ADAP: Rhode Island; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $700,000; 
ADAP base grant: $1,911,506; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
37%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $773. 

State ADAP: South Carolina; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $2,227,781; 
ADAP base grant: $11,736,984; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
19%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $400. 

State ADAP: South Dakota; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $330,744; 
ADAP base grant: $204,654; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
162%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $3,410. 

State ADAP: Tennessee; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $12,018,438; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

State ADAP: Texas; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $36,468,308; 
ADAP base grant: $50,471,351; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
72%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,524. 

State ADAP: Utah; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $1,980,565; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

State ADAP: Vermont; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $305,000; 
ADAP base grant: $382,007; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
80%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,685. 

State ADAP: Virginia; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $4,746,537; 
ADAP base grant: $14,498,751; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
33%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $691. 

State ADAP: Washington; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $6,567,971; 
ADAP base grant: $7,966,718; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
82%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,739. 

State ADAP: West Virginia; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $446,941; 
ADAP base grant: $1,303,875; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
34%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $723. 

State ADAP: Wisconsin; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $1,510,026; 
ADAP base grant: $3,179,514; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
47%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $1,002. 

State ADAP: Wyoming; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $0; 
ADAP base grant: $160,347; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 0%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $0. 

Total; 
Total additional ADAP funding: $427,288,351; 
ADAP base grant: $ 727,320,929; 
Total additional ADAP funding as percentage of the ADAP base grant: 
59%; 
Total additional ADAP funding per AIDS case: $-. 

Source: HRSA and GAO analysis. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Related GAO Products: 

Ryan White CARE ACT: Title I Funding for San Francisco. GAO/HEHS-00-
189R. Washington, D.C.: August 24, 2000. 

Ryan White CARE Act: Opportunities to Enhance Funding Equity. GAO/T-
HEHS-00-150. Washington, D.C.: July 11, 2000. 

HIV/AIDS: Use of Ryan White CARE Act and Other Assistance Grant Funds. 
GAO/HEHS-00-54. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 2000. 

HIV/AIDS Drugs: Funding Implications of New Combination Therapies for 
Federal and State Programs. GAO/HEHS-99-2. Washington, D.C.: October 
14, 1998. 

Revising Ryan White Funding Formulas. GAO/HEHS-96-116R. Washington, 
D.C.: March 26, 1996. 

Ryan White CARE Act of 1990: Opportunities to Enhance Funding Equity. 
GAO/HEHS-96-26. Washington, D.C.: November 13, 1995. 

Ryan White CARE Act: Access to Services by Minorities, Women, and 
Substance Abusers. GAO/T-HEHS-95-112. Washington, D.C.: July 17, 1995. 

Ryan White CARE Act of 1990: Opportunities Are Available to Improve 
Funding Equity. GAO/T-HEHS-95-126. Washington, D.C.: April 5, 1995. 

Follow-up on Ryan White Testimony. GAO/HEHS-95-119R. Washington, D.C.: 
March 31, 14, 1995. 

Ryan White CARE ACT of 1990: Opportunities Are Available to Improve 
Funding Equity. GAO/T-HEHS-95-91. Washington, D.C.: February 22, 1995. 

Ryan White Funding Formulas. GAO/HEHS-95-79R. Washington, D.C.: 
February 14, 1995. 

Ryan White CARE Act: Access to Services by Minorities, Women, and 
Substance Abusers. GAO/HEHS-95-94. Washington, D.C.: January 13, 1995. 

FOOTNOTES

[1] Pub. L. No. 101-381, 104 Stat. 576 (codified as amended at 42 
U.S.C. §§ 300ff--300ff-101 (2000). The CARE Act added a new title XXVII 
to the Public Health Service Act. In general, because Title I of the 
CARE Act authorized grants to metropolitan areas and Title II 
authorized grants to states, these programs are referred to as Title I 
and Title II programs, respectively. 

[2] Under Title I, a metropolitan area with a population of at least 
500,000 and 2,000 reported AIDS cases in the last 5 calendar years 
becomes eligible to receive a portion of Title I funding. 

[3] HRSA calculates a jurisdiction's estimated living AIDS cases by 
using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on the 
reported AIDS case counts for the last 10 years and weighting those 
numbers to account for the likelihood of deaths. We used this estimate 
in our analyses of CARE Act funding formula allocations, and we refer 
to this measure as the number of AIDS cases in our discussion of these 
analyses. 

[4] The HIV case counts were calculated by subtracting the number of 
reported deaths among HIV cases from the number of reported HIV cases. 

[5] Our analyses include CARE Act funding and programs in the 50 
states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. 

[6] There are supplemental grants under Title I that are determined by 
a competitive application process. For purposes of this testimony, 
these Title I supplemental grants were not included. 

[7] See GAO, Ryan White CARE Act of 1990: Opportunities Are Available 
to Improve Funding Equity, GAO/T-HEHS-95-126 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 5, 
1995). See also related GAO products at the end of this statement. 

[8] 42 U.S.C. § 300ff-13(a)(3)(D)(i)(2000). 

[9] Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, Measuring What 
Matters: Allocation, Planning, and Quality Assessment for the Ryan 
White CARE Act (Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press, 2004). 

[10] For EMAs that cross state boundaries, we estimated the amount of 
funding received by each state. Using data obtained from HRSA, we 
calculated the number of AIDS cases from each state in these EMAs. We 
then calculated the percentage of AIDS cases in each state and 
allocated the EMA funding to each state based on this percentage. For 
example, approximately 96 percent of the cases in the Boston EMA are in 
Massachusetts and 4 percent are in New Hampshire. Consequently, we 
allocated 96 percent of the Boston EMA's funding to Massachusetts and 4 
percent to New Hampshire. 

[11] The amounts guaranteed in the Title I hold-harmless provisions 
differed in the 1996 and 2000 CARE Act reauthorizations. In the 1996 
reauthorization the guaranteed amounts ranged from 95 to 100 percent of 
the 1995 base grant. In the 2000 reauthorization the guaranteed amounts 
ranged from 85 to 98 percent of the 2000 base grant. 

[12] The guaranteed amount is calculated by multiplying the two 
percentages (89 and 95) together. In other words, in fiscal year 2004 
San Francisco was guaranteed to receive at least 89 percent of its 
fiscal year 2000 Title I base grant. Its fiscal year 2000 Title I base 
grant was guaranteed to be no less than 95 percent of its fiscal year 
1995 Title I base grant. 

[13] To be eligible for Title I funding, an area must have reported 
more than 2,000 AIDS cases during the most recent 5 calendar years and 
have a population of at least 500,000. These criteria differ from those 
used to calculate funding allocations, which are determined using the 
number of AIDS cases. AIDS cases are calculated by applying annual 
national survival weights to the most recent 10 years of reported AIDS 
cases and adding the totals from each year. In the 1990 CARE Act, EMAs 
were defined as a metropolitan area with a cumulative count of more 
than 2,000 AIDS cases or a cumulative count of AIDS cases that exceeded 
one-quarter of one percent of its population. 

[14] Both EMA eligibility and emerging community funding are based on 
the number of AIDS cases reported in the most recent 5 calendar years. 

[15] To be eligible for a Severe Need grant, a state must have met at 
least one of four eligibility criteria as of January1, 2000. It must 
have limited (1) the eligibility of ADAP clients to those with incomes 
at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, (2) the number of 
ADAP clients by using medical eligibility restrictions, (3) the number 
of antiretroviral drugs covered in its drug formulary, or (4) the 
number of opportunistic infection medications to less than 10 in its 
drug formulary. (Opportunistic infections are illnesses such as 
parasitic, viral, and fungal infections, and some types of cancer, some 
of which usually do not cause disease in people with normal immune 
systems.) Having met the eligibility criteria, a state can then apply 
for the Severe Need grants each year by agreeing to provide the 
statutorily required 25 percent state match through state funds or in-
kind services. 

[16] We chose Title II base grants to illustrate the effect of using 
HIV case counts in funding formulas. All of our analyses were conducted 
using estimated living AIDS cases. 

[17] The Census Bureau lists the following jurisdictions as being in 
the South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, 
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, 
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West 
Virginia. 

[18] Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, Measuring What 
Matters: Allocation, Planning, and Quality Assessment for the Ryan 
White CARE Act (Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press, 2004), 
pp. 87-134. 

[19] CDC has established a set of performance standards for accepting 
case counts from HIV reporting systems. These standards include that 
case reporting be complete (greater than or equal to 85 percent of 
cases are reported) and timely (greater than or equal to 66 percent of 
cases reported within 6 months of diagnosis) and that evaluation 
studies demonstrate that the approach used to conduct surveillance must 
result in accurate case counts (less than or equal to 5 percent of 
reported cases are duplicates). As of June 2005, CDC has determined 
that the only systems which have been evaluated that meet these 
standards use confidential, name-based reporting. Some jurisdictions 
use codes instead of names to secure the privacy of the individuals 
being counted. 

[20] Pennsylvania has a name-based reporting system for all areas of 
the state except Philadelphia. The city received special permission to 
establish a code-based system. Philadelphia implemented such a system 
in 2004, but it is separate from the Pennsylvania reporting system. 

[21] CDC also has other concerns about code-based reporting. For 
example, code-based reporting places a greater burden on health care 
providers because submitted codes are frequently incomplete and require 
extensive follow-up by surveillance personnel with providers to resolve 
potential duplicate reports on the same person. 

[22] We used estimated living AIDS cases in these analyses, which is 
the measure used by HRSA in determining Title II base grants. 

[23] In these analyses, Connecticut, Kentucky, and New Hampshire are 
classified as not having their HIV case counts accepted by CDC. Our 
analyses were conducted using fiscal year 2004 allocations, which were 
based on case reports as of June 30, 2003. At that time, Connecticut 
had name-based HIV reporting for only pediatric cases, but established 
name-based reporting for all cases in 2005. Kentucky had code-based 
reporting at that time and established name-based reporting in 2004. 
New Hampshire established mandatory name-based reporting in 2005, but 
previously accepted reports using the patient name, a code, or no 
identifier. 

[24] Other factors may also affect the ratio of HIV to AIDS cases in a 
reporting system. For example, some states with newer reporting systems 
were among the first to be affected by the HIV epidemic. This could 
mean that in those states there are relatively more AIDS cases and the 
ratio of HIV to AIDS cases would be lower than in states more recently 
experiencing an HIV epidemic. 

[25] The 2004 Department of Health and Human Services' federal poverty 
level for a single person was $9,310; the poverty levels are higher for 
Alaska ($11,630) and Hawaii ($10,700). Poverty level is not defined for 
Puerto Rico. 

[26] In the state ADAP profile reports for ADAP grant year 2004, 
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and New Jersey each reported having 1,000 
drugs on their ADAP formularies, and Washington reported it had 125 
drugs on its formulary. 

[27] In fiscal year 2003, 20 states reported that they used either 
funds from their Title II base ($3 million) or ADAP ($23.5 million) 
grants to purchase health care insurance. 

[28] ADAP grant year 2004 covers the period April 1, 2004 through March 
31, 2005. 

[29] According to HRSA, Puerto Rico is not required to provide matching 
funds for Severe Need grants. 

[30] ADAPs can receive drug rebates through (1) the federal Section 
340B drug discount program, (2) their states' negotiated rebates, or 
(3) the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors' 
negotiated rebates. 

[31] In fiscal year 2003, 33 EMAs in 16 states used $33.3 million of 
their Title I funds to provide HIV and AIDS pharmaceutical assistance.