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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A pandemic of the poor: social disadvantage and the U.S. HIV epidemic.

TLDR
The interlocking relationships between biological, social, and behavioral factors that drive HIV/AIDS epidemics are discussed and the social positions of those most affected by HIV and AIDS are described, particularly racial and gender groups.
Abstract
The U.S. HIV/AIDS epidemic has evolved over the past 30 years and is now concentrated in socially marginalized and disenfranchised communities. The health disparities in this epidemic are striking, with most HIV infections occurring in sexual minorities and communities of color. While widely recognized, the health disparities in HIV and AIDS are not often discussed. In this article, we examine the factors underlying health disparities in the U.S. HIV epidemic. We first discuss the interlocking relationships between biological, social, and behavioral factors that drive HIV/AIDS epidemics. Guided by a well-established conceptual model of health disparities, we then describe the social positions of those most affected by HIV and AIDS, particularly racial and gender groups. Structural and economic conditions-including environmental resources, constraints, access to care, and psychosocial influences-are examined in relation to HIV disease trajectories. Greater attention to contextual factors and comorbidities is needed to reduce the health disparities in HIV/AIDS.

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HIV and Hodgkin Lymphoma Survival: A Prospective Study in Botswana

- 01 May 2022 - 
TL;DR: In the Thabatse Cancer Cohort, consenting participants initiating treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma at one of four cancer centers in Botswana were enrolled from 2010 to 2020 as discussed by the authors .
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Predictors of condom use in women receiving court-mandated drug and alcohol treatment: implications for intervention

TL;DR: The findings suggest that perceptions of relationship commitment, regardless of perceptions of partner risk, strongly affect condom use among women court-mandated into drug and alcohol treatment, and positive outcome expectancies are associated with a greater likelihood of condom use.
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Census Tract Poverty and Racial Disparities in HIV Rates in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, 2009–2014

TL;DR: This paper used the Public Health Disparities Geocoding Project (PHDP) to examine HIV rates by census tract poverty and found that the association between poverty and HIV may differ by subpopulation, while demonstrating the potential for HIV prevention targeting residents of high poverty areas.
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Engaging a Predominantly Latino Community in HIV Prevention: Laying the Groundwork for Pre-exposure Prophylaxis and HIV Sexual Health Programs.

TL;DR: The Ending the Epidemic Blueprint for New York State, published in 2014, recognized the urgent need to enhance low-threshold HIV prevention efforts and multidimensional clinical services with the goals of decreasing HIV incidence, increasing access to prevention services, and driving down prevalence by the end of 2020.
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A review of current strategies to improve HIV prevention and treatment in sexual and gender minority Latinx (SGML) communities.

TL;DR: There is a dire need for the combination of biomedical, behavioral, and social/structural interventions to reduce risks for acquiring HIV and improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum among SGML.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study

TL;DR: For example, this article found a strong relationship between the breadth of exposure to abuse or household dysfunction during childhood and multiple risk factors for several of the leading causes of death in adults.
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A Threat in the Air How Stereotypes Shape Intellectual Identity and Performance

TL;DR: Research shows that this threat dramatically depresses the standardized test performance of women and African Americans who are in the academic vanguard of their groups, that it causes disidentification with school, and that practices that reduce this threat can reduce these negative effects.
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American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that racial segregation is crucial to explaining the emergence of the urban underclass during the 1970s and that a strong interaction between rising rates of poverty and high levels of residential segregation explains where, why and in which groups the underclass arose.
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Social Conditions as Fundamental Causes of Disease

TL;DR: It is argued that social factors such as socioeconomic status and social support are likely 'fundamental causes" of disease that affect multiple disease outcomes through multiple mechanisms, and consequently maintain an association with disease even when intervening mechanisms change.
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Adherence to protease inhibitor therapy and outcomes in patients with HIV infection.

TL;DR: Given the critical importance of adherence to therapy to patient outcome, secondary prevention of HIV infection, and willingness of providers to prescribe therapy, this prospectively investigated the association between protease inhibitor adherence and patient outcome and factors related to adherence.
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