| Literature DB >> 26296521 |
Allysha C Robinson1, Amy R Knowlton2, Andrea C Gielen2, Joseph J Gallo3.
Abstract
We evaluated a synergistic epidemic (syndemic) of substance use, mental illness, and familial conflict non-negotiation among HIV-positive injection drug users (IDU). Baseline BEACON study data was utilized. Latent class analyses identified syndemic classes. These classes were regressed on sex, viral suppression, and acute care non-utilization. Females were hypothesized to have higher syndemic burden, and worse health outcomes than males. Nine percent of participants had high substance use/mental illness prevalence (Class 4); 23 % had moderate levels of all factors (Class 3); 25 % had high mental illness (Class 2); 43 % had moderate substance use/mental illness (Class 1; N = 331). Compared to Classes 1-3, Class 4 was mostly female (p < .05), less likely to achieve viral suppression, and more likely to utilize acute care (p < .05). Interventions should target African-American IDU females to improve their risk of negative medical outcomes. Findings support comprehensive syndemic approaches to HIV interventions, rather than singular treatment methods.Entities:
Keywords: African-Americans; HIV; Health disparities; Health services research; Injection drug use; Syndemic theory; Viral suppression
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26296521 PMCID: PMC5125621 DOI: 10.1007/s10865-015-9670-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Med ISSN: 0160-7715