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What's Driving the US Epidemic among Women
Adaora Adimora
Univ of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US
Background: Since the first AIDS cases were reported
in 1981, the portrait of the HIV pandemic in the United States has become
increasingly female and increasingly black. By the end of 2005, women in the United States comprised 19% of the 956,019 cumulative reported AIDS cases, 36% of reported
AIDS deaths, and 23% of the estimated 421,873 people living with HIV. Of the
181,769 AIDS cases among women, 60% have been black. Among women of all racial
and ethnic groups, heterosexual contact is the most common transmission
category. Numerous factors contribute to women’s increasing representation in
the U.S. HIV pandemic; foremost among them are racism, poverty, and gender
inequity. These distal determinants foster sexual network characteristics and
patterns of HIV distribution that promote differential transmission among
subpopulations in the United States.
Conclusions: Slowing the HIV epidemic among minority
women will require addressing not only individual-level behavioral factors, but
also the distal societal determinants that support and maintain HIV
transmission.
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