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Extracted from Consolidated Report
This investigation was originally published as part of a larger consolidated report containing multiple investigations. View the consolidated PDF for the complete document.
⚠️ Translation Notice: This content has been automatically translated. The original English text is the official version. Translation may contain errors.
⚠️ Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
Recommendations 2
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R00-02Page 7701-03 02-04 03-05 04-06 05-07 06-08 07-09 08-10 09-11 0 to 14 years 0.3* 0.3* 0.0* 0.0* 0.0* 0.0* 0.3* 0.7* 1.0* 0.7* 15 to 24 years 27.0 30.4 34.7 26.3 30.8 31.8 38.4 42.9 44.8 48.7 25 to 44 years 204.4 198.8 167.7 135.2 174.8 218.6 315.8 350.2 385.5 343.0 45 to 64 years 271.2 256.0 210.7 191.9 250.1 317.2 456.9 546.7 613.6 582.3 65+ years 49.4 44.5 29.7 29.2 43.3 60.9 73.2 76.8 83.6 80.1 Monterey County 126.0 121.1 102.1 87.9 114.4 144.3 206.2 238.1 264.6 245.2 *Statistically unstable; interpret with caution. Source: Monterey County Health Department, Communicable Disease Unit; June 15, 2012; statistical analyses performed by Monterey County Health Department, Surveillance and Epidemiology Unit. Persons ages 25 to 64 had the highest rates of chronic hepatitis C infection between 2000-2002 and 2009-2011 than other age groups. The rate of chronic hepatitis C significantly increased across all age groups, except 0-14 year olds, from 2000- 2002 and 2009-2011. Exhibit 81. Newly diagnosed chronic hepatitis C cases per 100,000 by race/ethnicity 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0
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R99-01Page 6800-02 01-03 02-04 03-05 04-06 05-07 06-08 07-09 08-10 Asian/Pacific Islander (nH) 82.8 84.2 86.2 88.8 88.4 87.5 84.7 83.1 81.9 80.3 Black (nH) 83.5 83.2 82.9 80.7 78.3 79.9 80.4 78.9 75.4 74.1 Hispanic/Latino, any race 76.2 79.9 81.3 80.7 78.0 77.0 75.4 74.0 72.9 71.5 Multiple/Other races (nH) 80.0 82.6 83.7 84.9 84.7 86.9 83.4 81.4 82.1 82.5 White (nH) 90.4 91.5 91.6 92.0 91.0 90.5 88.6 87.0 86.2 86.0 Monterey County 80.0 82.7 83.8 83.7 81.4 80.4 78.4 76.9 75.8 74.6 (nH) = non-Hispanic Source: California Department of Public Health, Health Information and Research Section, Birth Statistical Master File 1999-2010; statistical analyses performed by Monterey County Health Department, Surveillance and Epidemiology Unit. White, non-Hispanic women were the most likely to enter into prenatal care in the first trimester (86% in 2008- 2010) from 1999 through 2010; Hispanic women of all races were the least likely (71% in 2008-2010) and significantly lower. The rate of entry into first trimester care for all race/ethnic groups combined dropped slightly between the early 2000s and 2010, although not statistically significant. Exhibit 69. Entry into prenatal care during the first trimester disparity and trend analysis Population Groups Disparity, 2008-2010 Time Trend, 1999-2010 17 years and less Significantly lower Not statistically significant 18 to 24 years Significantly lower Not statistically significant Monterey County 2013 Community Health Assessment 60