NEW YORK -- New calculations to better track HIV infections confirm that the U.S. is seeing a strong and steady decline.

The number of new cases has been falling for years. But health officials wanted a clearer picture of how the epidemic was behaving. They count people when they were diagnosed with the AIDS virus - not when they actually contracted it, which can be months or years earlier.

Counting infections instead of diagnoses is a more ideal gauge - a kind of speedometer that tells how fast the epidemic is actually moving, said David Holtgrave, an HIV researcher at Johns Hopkins University.

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention used blood test results to help date the infections. Their calculations showed new infections dropped by nearly 18 percent over six years, the CDC reported Tuesday. Though health experts expected a decline, they welcomed the confirmation.

“It’s very exciting to see this kind of drop,” said Ron Brookmeyer, a statistician at the University of California, Los Angeles.

It suggests that stepped-up efforts to diagnose and treat infections are paying off, he added.

The agency found that between 2008 and 2014, new infections fell:

Two-thirds of the people who are diagnosed with HIV each year are gay and bisexual men. The CDC saw substantial declines in new infections in very young and in middle-aged men in that group. But there was a 35 percent increase in men ages 25 to 34, offsetting the other decreases.

Officials also said they were able to estimate annual HIV infections in 35 states. No state saw an increase. Seven saw significant decreases - Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina and Texas.



18 percent in the overall population, from 45,700 to 37,600.



36 percent in heterosexuals.



56 percent in people who inject drugs.



HIV is the virus that causes AIDS. According to the CDC, more than 1.2 million people in the U.S. are infected with the HIV, and they believe 1 in 8 of them are unaware they have the virus. The World Health Organization estimates that in 2016, 36.7 million people worldwide are infected wtih the virus.