Literature DB >> 33818710

Modeling the Effect of HIV/AIDS Stigma on HIV Infection Dynamics in Kenya.

Ben Levy1, Hannah E Correia2,3, Farainumashe Chirove4, Marilyn Ronoh5, Ash Abebe4, Moatlhodi Kgosimore6, Obias Chimbola7, M Hellen Machingauta7, Suzanne Lenhart8, K A Jane White9.   

Abstract

Stigma toward people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) has impeded the response to the disease across the world. Widespread stigma leads to poor adherence of preventative measures while also causing PLWHA to avoid testing and care, delaying important treatment. Stigma is clearly a hugely complex construct. However, it can be broken down into components which include internalized stigma (how people with the trait feel about themselves) and enacted stigma (how a community reacts to an individual with the trait). Levels of HIV/AIDS-related stigma are particularly high in sub-Saharan Africa, which contributed to a surge in cases in Kenya during the late twentieth century. Since the early twenty-first century, the United Nations and governments around the world have worked to eliminate stigma from society and resulting public health education campaigns have improved the perception of PLWHA over time, but HIV/AIDS remains a significant problem, particularly in Kenya. We take a data-driven approach to create a time-dependent stigma function that captures both the level of internalized and enacted stigma in the population. We embed this within a compartmental model for HIV dynamics. Since 2000, the population in Kenya has been growing almost exponentially and so we rescale our model system to create a coupled system for HIV prevalence and fraction of individuals that are infected that seek treatment. This allows us to estimate model parameters from published data. We use the model to explore a range of scenarios in which either internalized or enacted stigma levels vary from those predicted by the data. This analysis allows us to understand the potential impact of different public health interventions on key HIV metrics such as prevalence and disease-related death and to see how close Kenya will get to achieving UN goals for these HIV and stigma metrics by 2030.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HIV; Kenya; Mathematical model; Stigma; UN goals

Year:  2021        PMID: 33818710     DOI: 10.1007/s11538-021-00891-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Math Biol        ISSN: 0092-8240            Impact factor:   1.758


  1 in total

1.  Long-Term Forecast of HIV/AIDS Epidemic in China with Fear Effect and 90-90-90 Strategies.

Authors:  Ling Xue; Kai Zhang; Hao Wang
Journal:  Bull Math Biol       Date:  2022-10-05       Impact factor: 3.871

  1 in total

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