Rates* of reported cases† of hepatitis A, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2022
Source: CDC, National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System.
* Rates per 100,000 population.
† Reported confirmed cases. For the case definition, see Acute Hepatitis A.
State or jurisdiction listed in order of increasing rate and then alphabetical order.
* Rates per 100,000 population.
† Reported confirmed cases. For the case definition, see Acute Hepatitis A.
State or jurisdiction listed in order of increasing rate and then alphabetical order.
States and jurisdictions are grouped by quintiles of the distribution of the rate of reported acute hepatitis A cases per 100,000 population. The highest rate category of 1.0–4.6 cases per 100,000 population included (in order of increasing rate) Alabama, North Carolina, Delaware, Florida, Virginia, Kansas, Georgia, Missouri, Maine, Mississippi. States with highest rates of hepatitis A were primarily located in the Southern United States and the East Coast.
Hepatitis A figures and tables
- Figure 1.1. Number of reported cases and estimated infections of hepatitis A — United States, 2015–2022
- Figure 1.2. Rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2021–2022
- Figure 1.3. Rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2022
- Figure 1.4. Rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by age group — United States, 2007–2022
- Figure 1.5. Rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by sex — United States, 2007–2022
- Figure 1.6. Rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by race/ethnicity — United States, 2007–2022
- Figure 1.7. Availability of information regarding risk behaviors or exposures associated with reported cases of hepatitis A — United States, 2022
- Table 1.1. Numbers and rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by state or jurisdiction — United States, 2018–2022
- Table 1.2. Numbers and rates of reported cases of hepatitis A, by demographic characteristics — United States, 2018–2022
- Table 1.3. Reported risk behaviors or exposures among reported cases of hepatitis A — United States, 2022
- Table 1.4. Numbers and rates of deaths with hepatitis A listed as a cause of death among residents, by demographic characteristics — United States, 2018–2022