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Journal ArticleDOI

State of HIV in the US Deep South

TLDR
This manuscript synthesizes recent data on HIV epidemiology, care financing, and current research literature on factors that predispose this region to experience a greater impact of HIV to inform efforts to effectively address HIV in the South.
Abstract
The Southern United States has been disproportionately affected by HIV diagnoses and mortality. To inform efforts to effectively address HIV in the South, this manuscript synthesizes recent data on HIV epidemiology, care financing, and current research literature on factors that predispose this region to experience a greater impact of HIV. The manuscript focuses on a specific Southern region, the Deep South, which has been particularly affected by HIV. Epidemiologic data from the Centers from Disease Control and Prevention indicate that the Deep South had the highest HIV diagnosis rate and the highest number of individuals diagnosed with HIV (18,087) in 2014. The percentage of new HIV diagnoses that were female has decreased over time (2008-2014) while increasing among minority MSM. The Deep South also had the highest death rates with HIV as an underlying cause of any US region in 2014. Despite higher diagnosis and death rates, the Deep South received less federal government and private foundation funding per person living with HIV than the US overall. Factors that have been identified as contributors to the disproportionate effects of HIV in the Deep South include pervasive HIV-related stigma, poverty, higher levels of sexually transmitted infections, racial inequality and bias, and laws that further HIV-related stigma and fear. Interventions that address and abate the contributors to the spread of HIV disease and the poorer HIV-related outcomes in the Deep South are warranted. Funding inequalities by region must also be examined and addressed to reduce the regional disparities in HIV incidence and mortality.

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Citations
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Challenges and opportunities in examining and addressing intersectional stigma and health

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Journal ArticleDOI

From a global crisis to the ‘end of AIDS’: New epidemics of signification

TL;DR: This review uses Treichler’s view of AIDS as an ‘epidemic of signification’ to develop a review of ‘End of AIDS’ discourses in recent years and investigates the political and philanthropic interests served by efforts to rebrand and re-signify the epidemic.
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Gargle Lavage as a Safe and Sensitive Alternative to Swab Samples to Diagnose COVID-19: A Case Report in Japan.

TL;DR: As COVID-19 continues to spread to now also affect low-resource countries that, under regular circumstances, have very limited capacity for intensive care, I hope that the authors will not repeat the mistakes of the past as seen with the HIV epidemic where lifesaving drugs were only available in highresource countries, leaving impoverished nations with limited or no access to lifesustaining therapies.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Epidemiology to Action: The Case for Addressing Social Determinants of Health to End HIV in the Southern United States.

TL;DR: John Snow’s investigation provides a good starting point for understanding the epidemiology of HIV in the southern United States (“the South”) and finds that consuming contaminated water in Soho was the primary determinant of cholera acquisition.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiological synergy. Interrelationships between human immunodeficiency virus infection and other sexually transmitted diseases.

TL;DR: Preliminary data from 83 reports on the impact of HIV infection on STDs suggest that, at a community level, HIV infection may increase the prevalence of some STDs (e.g., genital ulcerative and nonulcerative STDs), and if the same STDs facilitate transmission of HIV, these infections may greatly amplify one another.
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Estimating HIV Prevalence and Risk Behaviors of Transgender Persons in the United States: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: This systematic review of the US-based HIV behavioral prevention literature identified 29 studies focusing on male-to-female (MTF) transgender women and found prevalence rates of HIV and risk behaviors were low among FTMs, while higher HIV infection rates were found among African-American MTFs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Race, race-based discrimination, and health outcomes among African Americans.

TL;DR: Emerging work that locates the cause of race-based health disparities in the external effects of the contextual social space on the internal world of brain functioning and physiologic response is reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of HIV-related stigma on treatment adherence: systematic review and meta-synthesis

TL;DR: This review undertook a systematic assessment of the relationship between HIV‐related stigma and ART adherence to systematically assess the relationship with ART adherence itself.
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Understanding associations among race, socioeconomic status, and health: Patterns and prospects.

TL;DR: There is a need for greater attention to understanding how risks and resources in the social environment are systematically patterned by race, ethnicity and SES, and how they combine to influence cardiovascular disease and other health outcomes.
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