Inaccurate map edit

Is the map accurate? For instance, why is Hainan Island colored in a different color from mainland China? They are both part of the communist-controlled part of China(P.R.C.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 42.114.216.62 (talk) 18:40, 7 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Misleading graph/pic edit

Graph/pic should be of prevalance RATES and not absolute values, which could mislead. Very large countries like India, china will always have large numbers of anything. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 116.74.211.161 (talk) 16:10, 14 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

Vandalism on India! edit

Right now the page says 240,000,000 adult HIV patients, 40% of the population, in India. This is obviously way too high, it's eight times the world population of HIV positive.

I don't have the right data, but OMG, that needs to change. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.20.237.145 (talk) 08:40, 11 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Looks like this has been corrected. Emwu584 (talk) 23:07, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

data for Brazil edit

The table in the article quotes a 90% prevalence of HIV infected in Brazil!! I think this should be about 2.5% - can somebody who knows the correct figure edit this??

Looks like this has been corrected. Emwu584 (talk) 23:07, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

—Preceding unsigned comment added by Dameunmate (talkcontribs) 18:08, 11 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Considewring info at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIV/AIDS_in_Brazil and the fact that it's ranked as 15th in population despite the number shown, it should be 660,000 people infected; I'll correct for that now.

189.68.207.187 (talk) 16:38, 13 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Swaziland data edit

The Swaziland article states 42.6% HIV prevalence, this article only 36.8%. Should we use one data source for all the numbers (in which case the article should be WHO report Xś figures on HIV prevalence¨) or the best/latest/most accurate data sources? Ppe42 08:03, 22 November 2006 (UTC)Reply


does anyone think serbia and montenegro should be further separeted? Qrc2006 22:18, 29 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

Not unless there is data available for them as separate entities. --Erielhonan 01:40, 22 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

Here's a proposal for merging the HIV/AIDS population ranking table with the HIV/AIDS prevalence ranking table. I am also posting a link back to this talk page on Talk:List of countries by people living with HIV/AIDS, where I also pipe up in favor of merging these pages.

  Population Prevalence
Country / Territory Ranked by HIV/AIDS population people living with HIV/AIDS Date of Population Data

Ranked by prevalence rate(%)

HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate(%) Date of Prevalence Data
World
38,217,530
Swaziland 33
220,000
2003 est. 1
38.80
2003 est.
Botswana 22
350,000
2003 est. 2
37.30
2003 est.
Lesotho 25
320,000
2003 est. 3
28.90
2003 est.
Zimbabwe 4
1,800,000
2001 est. 4
24.60
2001 est.

Merged demo table trimmed, complete table available in history

Please feel free to edit or wikify before inclusion/merger. --Erielhonan 01:44, 16 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

Looks good and thanks for your work, though I have a few suggestions:
  • Maybe use wiki markup (see Help:Table)
  • Split the tables in a population table and a prevalence table and sort them separately (like this or this)
  • Remove the Date of Population Data columns and turn that info into footnotes
Need help?
--Van helsing 09:19, 18 October 2006 (UTC)Reply
In response to Van helsing:
  • I spent far too much time on this at the time I did it to put more time into wikifying it at that time. Unless there's a wiki markup plug-in for Dreamweaver?
  • I actually combined two tables that show the data in the manner you suggest. I wanted to see them in comparison to each other, because separately they are incomplete pictures of depth and breadth of the epidemic.
  • the Date of Population Data column highlights how stale the data is. IMHO no sense re-publishing this data if it's mostly 3-4 years old, particularly given how quickly the disease spreads and its mortality rate. This table was created out of my interest expressed in the point above.
  • Your point taken about footnoting it, but in the interest of accuracy and transparency I prefer if the date of the datapoints is inline with the data, a la List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures. It makes it clear if all datapoints are not from the same year (which may be important to a researcher), and it also makes it clear if the data isn't up-to-date (also notable if someone wants to cite the information). If most data in a set has similar chrono characteristics I'd say fine to note the date of the data in the header of the table and footnote the outliers, but when the dates are mixed as they are in this table I say it's better to include it inline.
--Erielhonan 01:40, 22 October 2006 (UTC)Reply
Perhaps it appears at first unelegant, but in reality, sometimes the best data isn't all gonna be from the same date. Personally, I like the merged table, and suggest we wiki-ize it and maintain it on a best-data-available basis, rather than trying to use "snapshots" of data (like from the CIA!) for an actively changing epidemic. - Eric 07:24, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
Okay, well, I was feeling bold, so I just did it. I wikified the above table and put it into place. Please comment! - Eric 08:18, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
Bold? :-) That’s good work, thanks. Think we can complete the merge now. Maybe even introduce sorting, though to let it work properly, some changes have to be made. --Van helsing 08:49, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
Is the current article title (List of countries by HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate) still considered correct? Or would "List of countries by HIV/AIDS" or "List of countries by HIV/AIDS prevalence (or occurrence)" be a better description of the information the article now contains? We also need to take care of all the links coming in to the merged articles, therefore we need a final proper name. --Van helsing 09:27, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

CIA edit

Um, wait, why are we using data from the CIA World Factbook? Surely there's a better option- U.N.? WHO? UNICEF? - Eric 07:18, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

I couldn't find any reference on the CIA site explaining where they got their numbers. Any info?159.105.80.220 (talk) 18:42, 19 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yes, CIA data should only be used in the absence of other data. It is not a reliable source in the opinion of most (non-American) people. Would you trust such a table made up entirely of data from China's intelligence agency or the old Soviet KGB? The CIA distributes propaganda and the whole world knows how unreliable it is. Non-American government sources must be used for this table to be of any use.--ЗAНИA talk WB talk] 00:36, 1 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Inexactness edit

Almost all prevalence numbers are rounded off to the nearest .1% number, and in many cases incorrectly - Sweden is listed as having 3600 cases, and a 0.1 prevalence. Given Sweden's population of 9 million, that would give a prevalence of 0.04%. It'd admittedly be a lot of work to rework these numbers, but shouldn't we at least cut off the (false) zero? (Making 38.40% into 38.4% etc) Lejman 19:18, 27 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Poland edit

Poland 031 120,650 2007 est. 55 1.10 2005 est.

??? According to polish article pl:HIV and polish authorities , there are ~10000 HIV diagnosed cases, and ~30000 estimated (diagnosed+non-diagnosed) in Poland. It's quite a difference between ~120000 AIDS cases (by this article) and ~30000 HIV cases (by other sources), isn't it?

[1] - Polish state agency monitoring AIDS and HIV cases - by the end of 2005 - ~2000 diagnosed AIDS cases. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.56.80.66 (talk) 15:52, 5 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

[2] - the answer to that! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.56.80.66 (talk) 22:34, 5 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Severely Bad Data here edit

Column 6, HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate(%), has no data points between 0.1 and 1.0, leading me to believe that some or all of the ones below .01 should in fact be 5 to 10 times as high. That, and the fact that they're often sorted incorreectly (they dont obey the order of the table). Someone who has access to the original source should go and fix the table. Soap Talk/Contributions 20:11, 27 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

It's worse than that. Norway and Iraq and shown next to each other in the first table (rate of incidence), and yet Norway has 2,100 cases and a population of only 4.8 million whereas Iraq has only 500 cases but a population of 31 million. Something very wrong here. I have no idea which number is wrong - the percentage, or the number of cases (I DO know that the population numbers I have quoted are correct). I just surfed on into this subject, thus I have no interest in figuring out what is wrong with it, but some thing is. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.152.200.175 (talk) 18:14, 7 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
Another problem is Vietnam - by rate of incidence, Vietnam is one of the luckiest countries in the world, but by numbers of deaths, it is in the top 20 in the world. I guess once you get AIDS in Vietnam, you die almost instantly. Something wrong here.
The USA was listed to have an AIDS prevalence rate of over 2%. The CDC website states that AIDS prevalence is 1.1M, or 0.003% of the population. The source is listed as the CIA factbook, which didn't have USA stats on AIDS when I checked it.
But when I edited the USA stat, it no longer made sense in the backdrop of the list.
And checking some CIA factbook stats made no sense either. For example, South Africa was listed as having an aids prevalence of 18.9% in this article and the factbook, but with an absolute value of 7.1 million in 2016. Dividing 7.1 million by 55.91 million gives 12.7%, not 18.9%.
It seems like the article could use some better sources.
How might we properly mark the page for other editors?
The current cleanup tag says it needs an "update" but isn't that different from there being potential errors?

Emwu584 (talk) 23:04, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

1.1 million divided by 325 million is not 0.003%, It's 0.3%. Maproom (talk) 07:06, 27 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Vietnam edit

There seems to be some problem with the data on vietnam. It is listed as 79th in rank but is in the list between 165. Likewise, rank 79 is skipped in the list.

Looks like this is resolved.Emwu584 (talk) 23:10, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

New Discussion edit

A discussion has been started at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Countries/Lists of countries which could affect the inclusion criteria and title of this and other lists of countries. Editors are invited to participate. Pfainuk talk 11:11, 17 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Please keep the old tables when updating data edit

The evolution in time of those figures is just as important as their values at a given time, and probably even more. Thank you Emwu584 (talk) 23:03, 26 April 2018 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.198.147.13 (talk) 11:21, 30 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

INCORRECT DATA edit

I have controlled the data of the "HIV/AIDS adult living" , and a lot of that are not correct. I've found new correct data and I write that instead of the oldest one, but only for these countries: Italy,France,Germany,UK,Brazil. I guess we must change also the numbers of other countries, because are quite different in the reality. --87.6.203.151 (talk) 23:49, 22 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think that the Israel prevalence is way too high. It doesn't make sense that it is higher than in Ethiopia, for instance. I checked the cia world factbook and it says the prevalence is 0.2%, not 3.3% as written in the page. It also makes more sense, I cross checked it with a couple of government estimations in Israel, and it gives a similar number. Anyways, thank you Wikipedia! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 132.68.72.7 (talk) 14:08, 3 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

Disputed edit

I came to this article while stub-sorting a couple of related lists. I am concerned that the figures appear to be incorrect, as suggested by various editors above. Some particular examples:

  • The figures for "rank by prevalence rate" disagree with the "Prevalence rate" (Botswana/Zimbabwe)
  • Turkey - dashes presumably intended as zeros, but 139th in rank?
  • In "rank", if you have two at "45" the next should be 47, and so on - several examples
  • UK: columns 2 and 3 are discrepant
  • Given all this and more, every individual statistic ought to be cited to a WP:RS, rather than the vague statement "data from various sources, such as the CIA World Factbook".
  • The sorting of the "People living with AIDS/HIV" column doesn't work, probably because there are commas in the numbers so they are treated as words.

PamD (talk) 09:16, 26 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

I've identified the problem with the sorting of that column: Turkey's dashes. Have changed them to hyphens. When that column is sorted Turkey appears at top; sorting it again the dashes were recognised as non-numeric so the column sorted as words. Now it sorts as numbers. Tried to use the -class="sortbottom" markup from Help:Sorting but couldn't get it to go. But perhaps the Turkey data was removed by some vandal anyway and needs to be replace. Does anyone watchlist this article, I wonder? PamD (talk) 09:46, 26 January 2011 (UTC)Reply
I was going through each entry and updating the statistics with individual sources as you suggested, and as I did this, I found that about half the data in the table was from a very old version of the CIA World Factbook, and newer data was unsourced. As a result, I decided to archive the entire table to the talk page and create a new combined table from the current CIA World Factbook. From now on, it should be simpler to ensure that individual updates can be made with references. Cardnl12 (talk) 01:22, 27 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Update edit

I have been checking this data, and while it looks like it was generally copied over reliably, a lot of it was out of date. I am updating it with more recent data and adding references to make the article reliable. Please help and add even more recent sources, or additional sources, if you have them. Cardnl12 (talk) 22:24, 26 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

I have archived the old data, which consisted of sourced data which was outdated, and current data which was unsourced, here:

HIV prevalence estimates edit

Country Rank (by HIV/AIDS population) People living with HIV/AIDS Date of population data Rank (by prevalence rate %) HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate % Date of prevalence data
  Swaziland 33 190,000 2008 est. 2 26.01 2008 est.
  Botswana 24 300,000 2008 est. 3 23.09 2008 est.
  Lesotho 23 320,000 2003 est. 1 23.20 2007 est.[1]
  Zimbabwe 5 1,800,000 2001 est. 4 15.30 2007 est.[1]
  South Africa 1 5,700,000 2003 est. 5 18.10 2007 est.[1]
  Namibia 31 200,000 2008 est. 6 15.03 2008 est.
  Zambia 8 1,100,000 2008 est. 7 15.02 2008 est.
  Malawi 12 900,000 2003 est. 8 11.90 2007 est.[1]
  Central African Republic 27 260,000 2003 est. 9 6.30 2007 est.[1]
  Mozambique 7 1,500,000 2008 est. 10 12.05 2008 est.
  Guinea-Bissau 78 17,000 2001 est. 11 1.80 2007 est.[1]
  Tanzania 6 1,600,000 2003 est. 12 6.20 2007 est.[1]
  Gabon 63 48,000 2003 est. 13 5.90 2007 est.[1]
  Cote d'Ivoire 16 570,000 2003 est. 14 3.90 2007 est.[1]
  Sierra Leone 34 170,000 2001 est. 15 1.70 2007 est.[1]
  Cameroon 18 560,000 2003 est. 16 5.10 2007 est.[1]
  Kenya 4 1,900,000 2008 est. 17 8.03 2008 est.
  Burundi 28 250,000 2003 est. 18 2.00 2007 est.[1]
  Liberia 49 100,000 2003 est. 19 1.70 2007 est.[1]
  Haiti 45 120,000 2008 est. 20 2.02 2008 est.
  Nigeria 2 2,600,000 2008 est. 21 3.01 2008 est.
  Rwanda 36 150,000 2008 est. 22 2.08 2008 est.
  Republic of the Congo 50 90,000 2003 est. 23 3.50 2007 est.[1]
  Chad 30 200,000 2003 est. 24 3.50 2007 est.[1]
  Ethiopia 11 980,000 2008 est. 25 2.00 2008 est.
  Democratic Republic of the Congo 9 1,100,000 2003 est. 26 4.20 2003 est.[1]
  Burkina Faso 41 130,000 2008 est. 27 1.06 2008 est.
  Togo 47 110,000 2003 est. 28 3.30 2007 est.[1]
  Uganda 19 530,000 2001 est. 29 5.40 2007 est.[1]
  Angola 29 240,000 2003 est. 30 2.10 2007 est.[1]
  Equatorial Guinea 107 5,900 2001 est. 31 3.40 2007 est.[1]
  Guinea 37 140,000 2003 est. 32 1.60 2007 est.[1]
  Trinidad and Tobago 69 29,000 2003 est. 33 1.50 2007 est.[1]
  Ghana 26 260,000 2008 est. 34 1.09 2008 est.
  The Bahamas 108 5,600 2003 est. 35 3.00 2007 est.[1]
  Djibouti 99 9,100 2003 est. 36 2.09 2003 est.
  Eritrea 59 60,000 2003 est. 37 2.07 2003 est.
  Guyana 90 11,000 2003 est. 38 2.50 2007 est.[1]
  Belize 115 3,600 2003 est. 39 2.10 2007 est.[1]
  Sudan 21 400,000 2001 est. 41 1.40 2007 est.[1]
  Benin 56 68,000 2003 est. 42 1.09 2003 est.
  Mali 40 140,000 2003 est. 43 1.09 2003 est.
  Honduras 70 28,000 2008 est. 44 0.7 2008 est.
  Dominican Republic 51 88,000 2003 est. 45 1.10 2007 est.[1]
  Madagascar 38 140,000 2003 est. 46 1.07 2003 est.
  Suriname 110 5,200 2001 est. 47 2.40 2007 est.[1]
  Barbados 127 2,500 2003 est. 48 1.20 2007 est.[1]
  Thailand 17 570,000 2003 est. 49 1.05 2003 est.
  Ukraine 20 440,000 2008 est. 50 1.06 2008 est.
  Burma 22 330,000 2003 est. 51 1.02 2003 est.
  The Gambia 103 6,800 2003 est. 52 1.02 2003 est.
  Niger 55 70,000 2003 est. 53 1.02 2003 est.
  Jamaica 72 22,000 2003 est. 54 1.60 2007 est.[1]
  Guatemala 60 59,000 2008 est. 56 0.8 2008 est.
  Russia 13 530,185 2010 est. 57 1.10 2007 est.[1]
  Panama 79 16,000 2003 est. 60 1.00 2007 est.[1]
  Senegal 64 44,000 2003 est. 61 0.8 2003 est.
  Argentina 43 120,000 2008 est. 73 0.5 2008 est.
  Venezuela 48 110,000 1999 est. 63 0.70 2001 est.[1]
  Spain 42 140,000 2001 est. 64 0.50 2007 est.[1]
  El Salvador 68 29,000 2003 est. 65 0.80 2007 est.[1]
  Colombia 32 190,000 2003 est. 66 0.60 2007 est.[1]
  Costa Rica 86 12,000 2003 est. 68 0.40 2007 est.[1]
  United States 10 1,200,000 2005 est. 67 0.60 2007 est.[1]
  Papua New Guinea 80 16,000 2003 est. 70 0.6 2003 est.
  Mauritania 97 9,500 2003 est. 71 0.6 2003 est.
  Latvia 102 7,600 2001 est. 72 0.80 2007 est.[1]
  Somalia 66 43,000 2001 est. 74 0.50 2007 est.[1]
  Paraguay 82 15,000 1999 est. 75 0.60 2007 est.[1]
  Peru 52 76,000 2008 est. 76 0.5 2008 est.
    Nepal 58 61,000 2001 est. 77 0.50 2007 est.[1]
  Belgium 84 23,000 2009 est. 77 0.43 2009 est.
  France 44 100,000-150,000 2007 est. 78 0.40 2007 est.[1]
   Switzerland 85 13,000 2001 est. 78 0.60 2007 est.[1]
  Portugal 73 22,000 2001 est. 80 0.50 2007 est.[1]
  Malaysia 62 52,000 2003 est. 81 0.4 2003 est.
  Brazil 15 600,000 2008 est. 69 0.4 2008 est.
  Austria 93 10,000 2003 est. 82 0.3 2003 est.
  Uruguay 106 6,000 2001 est. 83 0.60 2007 est.[1]
  Chile 71 26,000 2003 est. 84 0.30 2007 est.[1]
  Mexico 35 160,000 2003 est. 85 0.30 2007 est.[1]
  Libya 95 10,000 2001 est. 86 0.30 2001 est.[1]
  Canada 61 58,000 2005 est. 87 0.40 2007 est.[1]
  Ecuador 74 21,000 2003 est. 88 0.30 2007 est.[1]
  Belarus 81 15,000 2001 est. 89 0.20 2007 est.[1]
  Bahrain 141 600 2003 est. 91 0.20 2001 est.[1]
  Serbia 096 10,000 (Serbia and Montenegro) 2001 est. 92 0.10 2009 est.[1]
  Singapore 113 4,100 2003 est. 94 0.2 2003 est.
  Nicaragua 105 6,400 2003 est. 95 0.20 2007 est.[1]
  Netherlands 077 19,000 2001 est. 96 0.20 2007 est.[1]
  United Kingdom 064 105,000 2009 est. 83 0.2 2009 est.
  Malta 146 500 2003 est. 97 0.10 2007 est.[1]
  Moldova 109 5,500 2001 est. 98 0.40 2007 est.[1]
  Luxembourg 148 500 2003 est. 99 0.20 2007 est.[1]
  Kazakhstan 91 12,000 2008 est. 100 0.1 2008 est.
  Iceland 150 220 2001 est. 101 0.20 2007 est.[1]
  Denmark 111 5,000 2003 est. 103 0.2 2003 est.
  Italy 045 60,000-120,000 2009 est. 104 0.1-0.2 2009 est.
  Algeria 76 21,000 2008 est. 107 0.1 2008 est.
  Australia 83 14,000 2003 est. 108 0.1 2003 est.
  Azerbaijan 132 1,400 2003 est. 109 0.1 2003 est.
  Bolivia 112 4,900 2003 est. 110 0.1 2003 est.
  Bulgaria 120 3,000 2006 est. 111 0.10 2001 est.[1]
  Sri Lanka 117 3,500 2001 est. 112 0.1 2001 est.
  Maldives 158 100 2001 est. 113 0.1 2001 est.
  Oman 135 1,300 2001 est. 114 0.1 2001 est.
  Mauritius 140 700 2001 est. 115 0.1 2001 est.
  Morocco 075 21,000 2008 est. 116 0.1 2008 est.
  Macedonia 154 200 2003 est. 117 0.1 2001 est.
  Georgia 119 3,000 2003 est. 118 0.1 2001 est.
  Fiji 142 600 2003 est. 119 0.1 2003 est.
  Finland 131 1,500 2003 est. 120 0.1 2003 est.
  Czech Republic 128 2,500 2001 est. 121 0.1 2001 est.
  Ireland 121 2,800 2001 est. 122 0.1 2001 est.
  Egypt 89 12,000 2001 est. 123 0.1 2001 est.
  Cyprus 136 1,000 1999 est. 124 0.1 2003 est.
  Cuba 118 3,300 2003 est. 125 0.10 2007 est.[1]
  Tajikistan 153 200 2003 est. 127 0.1 2001 est.
  Syria 145 500 2003 est. 128 0.1 2001 est.
  Sweden 116 3,600 2001 est. 129 0.1 2001 est.
  Slovenia 149 280 2001 est. 130 0.1 2001 est.
  Philippines 100 9,000 2003 est. 168 0.01 2003 est.
  Poland 083 14,000 2003 est. 131 0.1 2005 est.
  Romania 104 10,000 2009 est. 132 0.1 2001 est.
  Estonia 144 560 2007 est. 133 0.1 2005 est.
  Pakistan 147 500 2009 est. 135 0.1 2009 est.
  Mongolia 147 500 2003 est 135 0.1 2003 est.
  Yemen 087 12,000 2001 est. 136 0.1 2001 est.
  Uzbekistan 092 11,000 2003 est. 137 0.1 2001 est.
  Turkmenistan 152 200 2003 est. 138 0.1 2004 est.
  Turkey - - - 139 0.1 2001 est.
  Tunisia 137 1,000 2003 est. 140 0.1 2005 est.
  Slovakia 155 200 2003 est. 141 0.1 2001 est.
  Lithuania 134 1,300 2003 est. 142 0.1 2001 est.
  Lebanon 124 2,800 2003 est. 143 0.1 2001 est.
  Laos 130 1,700 2003 est. 144 0.1 2003 est.
  South Korea 101 8,300 2003 est. 145 0.1 2003 est.
  Kyrgyzstan 114 3,900 2003 est. 146 0.1 2001 est.
  Jordan 143 600 2003 est. 147 0.1 2001 est.
  Japan 88 12,000 2003 est. 168 0.01 2003 est.
  New Zealand 133 1,400 2003 est. 149 0.1 2003 est.
  Norway 129 2,100 2001 est. 150 0.1 2001 est.
  Iraq 159 500 2003 est. 151 0.1 2001 est.
  Israel 122 3,000 1999 est. 152 0.1 2001 est.
  Iran 67 31,000 2001 est. 168 0.01 2001 est.
  Indonesia 46 110,000 2003 est. 154 0.1 2003 est.
  Croatia 156 200 2001 est. 156 0.1 2001 est.
  Germany 65 67,000 2009 est. 168 0.01 2009 est.
  Brunei 151 200 2003 est. 158 0.1 2003 est.
  Bhutan 157 100 1999 est. 159 0.1 2001 est.
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 138 900 2003 est. 160 0.1 2001 est.
  Bangladesh 84 13,000 2001 est. 161 0.1 2001 est.
  Armenia 125 2,600 2003 est. 162 0.1 2003 est.
  Hungary 123 1,400 2001 est. 163 0.1 2007 est.
  Greece 98 9,100 2001 est. 102 0.08 2001 est.
  Cambodia 54 75,000 2008 est. 165 0.8 2008 est.
  Vietnam 25 290,000 2008 est. 166 0.5 2008 est.
  India 3 2,400,000 2010 est. 165 0.4 2010 est.
  People's Republic of China 14 700,000 2008 est. 168 0.01 2008 est.

Cardnl12 (talk) 00:53, 27 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Why don't you just use the most current CIA factbook estimates? They are from 2009. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2155rank.html — Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.216.225.139 (talk) 08:07, 19 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj Cite error: The named reference cia was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Inclusion of Svalbard as a nation? edit

It's a small group of islands that are part of Norway near the Arctic Circle, pop: abt 24,000; area: abt 24,000 sq mi; AIDs/HIV prevalence: 0. 173.210.125.42 (talk) 16:30, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

Svalbard's been mined for coal by a handful of countries around the beginning of the 20th century, but was officially acquired by Norway around 1925. As of July 1st, 2011, there were 2,539 people registered on Svalbard, the majority of whom are of Norwegian descent. I wouldn't consider it to be any other country than Norway. 74.102.77.141 (talk) 20:05, 2 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

Orphaned references in List of countries by HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate edit

I check pages listed in Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of List of countries by HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.

Reference named "CDC":

  • From Misconceptions about HIV/AIDS: "HIV Surveillance - Epidemiology of HIV Infection (through 2008)". Center for Disease Control. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  • From Tuberculosis: "Fact Sheets: The Difference Between Latent TB Infection and Active TB Disease". Centers for Disease Control. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
  • From Sex education: "Teen Birth Rate Rises for First Time in 14 Years" (Press release). CDC National Center for Health Statistics. 2007-12-05. Retrieved 2007-12-05. The report shows that between 2005 and 2006, the birth rate for teenagers aged 15-19 rose 3 percent, from 40.5 live births per 1,000 females aged 15-19 in 2005 to 41.9 births per 1,000 in 2006. This follows a 14-year downward trend in which the teen birth rate fell by 34 percent from its all-time peak of 61.8 births per 1,000 in 1991.

I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not. AnomieBOT 17:20, 13 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

Sortable table edit

It would be useful if the data could be sorted correctly. Currently, sorting data by prevalence rate puts 10% before 2%.

Thanks.Fredericgouin (talk) 14:39, 29 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

I just noticed this too, the less than signs are showing up as being higher than the all numbers. Also there is a bit of a breakdown in ordering before the <'s. Sorry I don't know how to fix this stuff myself. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.250.130.48 (talk) 00:43, 13 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

UK edit

The number of people with HIV/AIDS in the UK doesn't match the prevalence rate. Canada with half the population has nearly the same number of people with HIV AIDS yet has the same prevalence rate, for example.99.236.215.170 (talk) 17:52, 6 January 2014 (UTC)Reply

HIV/AIDS Related Deaths in Hungary edit

Please correct the data in the table related to HIV/ AIDS deaths in Hungary. The present data is way too high, the number if HIV/AIDS related deaths is around 10-15 annually. See: official newsletter of the National Center for Epidemology:

http://www.oek.hu/oek.web?to=11,754,1433,1439&nid=368&pid=1&lang=hun  — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jorgensen033 (talkcontribs) 07:16, 26 May 2014 (UTC)Reply 

Why is Russia missing in the table? edit

"According to the UN, Russia has experienced one of the world’s worst HIV outbreaks in recent years. The total number of people currently infected with HIV in Russia is believed to be roughly one million."

https://meduza.io/en/news/2018/07/13/new-hiv-infections-spiked-more-than-20-percent-in-moscow-last-year — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2001:16B8:4526:3200:9567:869D:2225:8723 (talk) 21:04, 15 July 2018 (UTC)Reply

External links modified edit

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Updated figures here edit

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/363.html

and

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/364.html

are more uptodate figures for the same estimates given in the article

Update table again 2022 edit

The CIA world factbook has updated to include 2020 estimates. Is there a way to efficiently copy data over into the table? Of the universe (talk) 06:28, 9 March 2022 (UTC)Reply

Israel edit

Israel is missing 169.255.184.162 (talk) 07:08, 14 August 2022 (UTC)Reply

Move discussion in progress edit

There is a move discussion in progress on Talk:List of countries and dependencies by population which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. —RMCD bot 00:03, 29 November 2022 (UTC)Reply

better data table edit

The rate per popultion would be better. Also total numbers diagnosed is somewhat meaningless. Perhaps look at what Europe does in this 2022 report pg 36 to see what can be useful: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/sites/default/files/documents/2022-Annual_HIV_Report_final.pdf HIV/AIDS surveillance in Europe 2022–2021 data SURVEILLANCE REPORT Table 1. New HIV diagnoses and rates per 100 000 population, by country and year of diagnosis (2012–2021) and cumulative totals, in EU/EEA and other countries of the WHO European Region 88.112.31.26 (talk) 22:16, 15 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

No source for 2 HIV infections in Svalbard edit

Neither the CIA world factook nor UNAIDS lists data on Svalbard, either not mentioning the territory at all (UNAIDS) or by "N/A" (CIA). The source on Norway does not provide any info on that either (though my understanding of Norwegian is limited by the fact that I do not speak it, but either way, it's not linked) Online research did not yield any results either. Am I overlooking something or is the number made up? EinWaldschrat (talk) 19:57, 19 October 2023 (UTC)Reply