Posted on 10/15/2003 4:32:42 AM PDT by walden
I'm having a debate on another board regarding AIDS and the reasons for high infection rates. This was my post:
Simple case, 2 coin tosses, heads=win: What are the odds of winning both times? Odds of winning first time is .5, odds of winning second time is .5, odds of winning both times is .5 x .5 = .5 to the 2nd power = .25, which is 25%.
More complex, add 1 more coin toss for 3 total, heads=win: Odds of winning third time is still .5, odds of winning all 3 times is .25 x .5 = .5 to the 3rd power = .125, which is 12.5%.
Each additional toss lowers the odds of winning every time, at an exponential rate.
This relates quite well to condom usage and sex-- to avoid AIDS, one must win every time. Assume the following:
Odds of condom failure 3% Odds of infected partner 20% (this is quite common in parts of Africa) Assume 1 act of sex per week for 10 years, what are the odds that an individual will "win every time", i.e., remain uninfected at the end of 10 years?
Odds of infection in a single sex act = .03 x .2 = .006 Odds of not getting infected in a single sex act (i.e., winning) = 1 - .006 = .994 Number of sex acts in 10 years= 1 x 52 x 10 = 520
Odds of winning every time (healthy at the end of ten years): .994 to the 520th power = .044 or 4.4 % which means that one has a 96% chance of contracting AIDS in that time period.
This was what someone responded to me:
The math started out well enought, but you're running into problems combining events A and B.
Odds of Failure (P|A) Odds of Infected Partner (P|B) Intersection of (P|A).(P|B) = 3/100*20/100=.006 (which you have right)
Now, you should more accurately treat this as a conditional probability. We'll use (P|B) as the condition, since you have to assume that you can only get infected if B has already occured (infected partner) and we are attempting to find the probability of A (condom failure) happens.
So P(A|B)=(P|A).(P|B)/(P|B)
Sooooo ... .006/.20=.03 Or 3%. You run into a couple problems here. One is that your selecting a sample of 520 different partners over a ten year period. If you know this guy, tell him I could use some tips getting a date for this wknd
What this 3% represents is the Normal Distribution of P(A|B) occuring. And a 97% chance of it not occurring (staying healthy). You can't just raise this by the power times the number of events (in this case, 520). You did this in the coin toss to discover what are the odds of getting a heads on toss 2, given that heads was on toss 1.
Your coint toss experiment is a Joint Occurance (i.e, A has happened, what are the chances B will happen, given A). While correct, we are dealing with Probability of Simultaneous Events (A exists, what is the chance that B will exist at the same time), which is a whole different breed of cat. In the long run, the probability of simultaneous events gets closer to the normal distribution, so you will have close to a 3% chance of P(A|B) occuring today, next week, or ten years down the road, every time. It doesn't compound, just by repeating the experiment. It gets closer to the mean (3%) as N (number of times) increases.
Now, you should more accurately treat this as a conditional probability. We'll use (P|B) as the condition, since you have to assume that you can only get infected if B has already occured (infected partner) and we are attempting to find the probability of A (condom failure) happens.
So P(A|B)=(P|A).(P|B)/(P|B)
Sooooo ... .006/.20=.03 Or 3%.
He went through all this to tell you the probability of a condom break is 3% when that was a GIVEN in the first place. What a stupid egghead ritual. As you figured (assuming your numbers are valid), the chances in any one given time are 0.006 and the chances over 520 times are as you calculated.
With AIDS so rampant in the gay community, and getting worse each day, if a person has stupid, reckless, promiscuous or drug addicted partners they have about a 100% chance of getting AIDS.
But you don't know that your partner has AIDS, so you have to take that probability into account too. But the probability of condom failure and finding an AIDS infected partner are independent events - the sample spaces are not affected by each other, as far as I can see. So if you choose a partner at random, and the odds that that person will be AIDS infected are .20, then the odds of condom failure and getting an AIDS infected partner for a single sex act is .03*.20, or .006, or six chances in a thousand that A and B will occur, and 994 chances in a thousand that one or both of those events (condom failure or having an AIDS infected parter) will not happen.
But since we're assuming that you only have to lose once to get AIDS, you need to figure up the probability that both of those events will eventually happen given some number of sex acts. Assume you choose a new partner at random every week, for 52 weeks of the year. Then the probability that both events (condom failure and getting an AIDS infected partner) will not occur across the span of a year is .994^52, or about .731. Across ten years, the probability of both events not occurring simultaneously - because you need both events to happen simultaneously to get AIDS - is .994^520, or about .04 - that is, there's about a 96% chance that both of those events will occur simultaneously over the span of ten years.
The odds of condom failure are closer to 13%. Somebody posted it on FR a while back.
So all those dead gay guys were drug users? I think not.
Right - that's the odds for a single occurence. But he wants to know the cumulative odds for multiple sex acts over some period of time, so you have to take that probability and raise it to the power of the number of discrete acts in order to calculate those odds. IOW, the odds that you will not flip heads on any given coin toss are 50%. The odds that you will not flip any heads across ten coin tosses are pretty small - about 1 in 1000.
The answer that you received is the probability for each individual occurrance, which does stay the same, assuming that all potential sex partners have an equal chance of being selected.
All potential sex partners do not have an equal chance of being selected. In fact, the rate of HIV infection is greater in those potential sex partners who are more likely to have sex with you. Do you think that the probability of a 65 year old woman, who has only had sex with her husband of 45 years is the same as a 20 year old homosexual, who has had multiple partners? Of course not. Therefor, if the rate of HIV infection in the general population is 10%, then the rate of HIV infection in the population willing to have casual sex is much, much higher.
The condom failure rate is usually determined by virginal hertosexual encounters. Anal penetration, either homosexual or hertosexual would have a much higher failure rate.
The probability is also affected by the transmission of body fluids or as some say whether you're a pitcher or a catcher.
I'm sure you could calculate the odds if you knew all the probabilities of the individual pieces, but common sense would tell you that having sex with certain sub-groups or certain sexual practices would increase your chances of being infected with the HIV virus. But alas, common sense is not a common commodity anymore.
Hey, stop saying what I'm about to say. Or at least stop being faster than me ;)
No, it doesn't really work that way - your odds on the 34'th time are still 3% for that event. What the cumulative risk calculation does show is that eventually that 3% risk will catch up with you - eventually, you will lose. Might be the first time out of the gate, or it might be the 100'th, or it might be the 1000'th - but the odds that you will win every single time start getting vanishingly small the more times you try it. You may have only a 1 in 6 chance of shooting yourself if you play Russian Roulette, but if you play a hundred times, I practically guarantee you're going to shoot yourself at least once - and like AIDS, once is all it takes to lose big ;)
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