Literature DB >> 12600355

AIDS in the HAART era: New York's heterogeneous geography.

Robert G Wallace1.   

Abstract

During the 1990s, the number of new AIDS cases in New York City, USA, declined precipitously. The declines, beginning before highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was introduced, were geographically heterogeneous across two New York City boroughs analyzed. From 1993 to 1998, zip codes in Lower Manhattan, with large white and affluent populations, had declines as much as 55% more than the rest of Manhattan. Bronx zip codes underwent still lesser declines. Declines also differed within zip codes among subpopulations. White zip code populations tended to have greater declines than Latino populations, which in turn tended to have greater declines than black populations. According to bivariate and stepwise regressions, an array of socioeconomic and community stress variables acted in combination on the decline in New York AIDS. Manhattan's declines in total AIDS incidence were primarily defined by changes in AIDS incidence for whites and for men who have sex with men, racial segregation, and the proportions of households in upper income classes and under rent stress. Bronx declines in total AIDS are principally explained by a broader range of income classes, and social instability as marked by housing overcrowding and cirrhosis and drug mortalities. Whatever the combination of proximate causes for the decline in AIDS incidence in 1990s New York (educational campaigns, HAART, demographic stochasticity), the decline was shaped by the city's socioeconomic structure and political and ecological history. That structure and history generates the geographically defined aggregates of behaviors that promote or impede AIDS decline. Such spatial heterogeneity may provide for HIV refugia, areas where the virus can weather the epidemic's contraction, a troubling possibility with the accelerating microbicidal failures of combination therapies.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12600355     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(02)00121-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  16 in total

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3.  Spatial clustering of HIV prevalence in Atlanta, Georgia and population characteristics associated with case concentrations.

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4.  Factors associated with utilization of HAART amongst hard-to-reach HIV-infected individuals in Atlanta, Georgia.

Authors:  Paulina Rebolledo; Ekaterina Kourbatova; Richard Rothenberg; Carlos Del Rio
Journal:  J AIDS HIV Res       Date:  2011-03

5.  Structural inequalities drive late HIV diagnosis: The role of black racial concentration, income inequality, socioeconomic deprivation, and HIV testing.

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6.  The aftermath of public housing relocations: relationships between changes in local socioeconomic conditions and depressive symptoms in a cohort of adult relocaters.

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7.  Types of dental fear as barriers to dental care among African American adults with oral health symptoms in Harlem.

Authors:  Karolynn Siegel; Eric W Schrimshaw; Carol Kunzel; Natalie H Wolfson; Joyce Moon-Howard; Harmon L Moats; Dennis A Mitchell
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8.  Race, place and AIDS: the role of socioeconomic context on racial disparities in treatment and survival in San Francisco.

Authors:  Michael Arnold; Ling Hsu; Sharon Pipkin; Willi McFarland; George W Rutherford
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2009-05-13       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  Risk factors for distress in the adolescent children of HIV-positive and HIV-negative drug-abusing fathers.

Authors:  D W Brook; J S Brook; E Rubenstone; C Zhang; F G Castro; N Tiburcio
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10.  Spatial distribution of HIV prevalence and incidence among injection drugs users in St Petersburg: implications for HIV transmission.

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