Literature DB >> 18613483

The gradient in sub-Saharan Africa: socioeconomic status and HIV/AIDS.

Jane G Fortson1.   

Abstract

Using data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for Burkina Faso (2003), Cameroon (2004), Ghana (2003), Kenya (2003), and Tanzania (2003), I investigate the cross-sectional relationship between HIV status and socioeconomic status. I find evidence of a robust positive education gradient in HIV infection, showing that, up to very high levels of education, better-educated respondents are more likely to be HIV-positive. Adults with six years of schooling are as much as three percentage points more likely to be infected with HIV than adults with no schooling. This gradient is not an artifact of age, sector of residence, or region of residence. With controls for sex, age, sector of residence, and region of residence, adults with six years of schooling are as much as 50% more likely to be infected with HIV than those with no schooling. Education is positively related to certain risk factors for HIV including the likelihood of having premarital sex. Estimates of the wealth gradient in HIV, by contrast, vary substantially across countries and are sensitive to the choice of measure of wealth.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18613483      PMCID: PMC2831364          DOI: 10.1353/dem.0.0006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Demography        ISSN: 0070-3370


  10 in total

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2.  Is poverty or wealth at the root of HIV?

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6.  Estimating wealth effects without expenditure data--or tears: an application to educational enrollments in states of India.

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7.  Does increased general schooling protect against HIV infection? A study in four African cities.

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8.  Optimal indicators of socioeconomic status for health research.

Authors:  Mary C Daly; Greg J Duncan; Peggy McDonough; David R Williams
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9.  Economic Status and Health in Childhood: The Origins of the Gradient.

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  10 in total
  48 in total

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5.  HIV infection and related risk behaviors: does school support level the playing field between orphans and nonorphans in Zimbabwe?

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Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2015-05-01

Review 6.  The social determinants of HIV serostatus in sub-Saharan Africa: an inverse relationship between poverty and HIV?

Authors:  Ashley M Fox
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2010 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 2.792

7.  Understanding the association between maternal education and use of health services in Ghana: exploring the role of health knowledge.

Authors:  Emily Smith Greenaway; Juan Leon; David P Baker
Journal:  J Biosoc Sci       Date:  2012-03-01

8.  The Population Education Transition Curve: Education Gradients Across Population Exposure to New Health Risks.

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9.  The Demographic Promise of Expanded Female Education: Trends in the Age at First Birth in Malawi.

Authors:  Monica J Grant
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10.  Childhood Risk of Parental Absence in Tanzania.

Authors:  Lauren Gaydosh
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2015-08
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