Miller Maureen
Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
J Urban Health. 2003 Dec;80(4 Suppl 3):iii88-96. doi: 10.1093/jurban/jtg086.
This article (1) reviews the research to identify mechanisms that may underlie HIV heterosexual transmission in developed and developing countries, (2) examines linkages between sex and substance use HIV transmission risks, and (3) describes sex network measurement issues relevant to developing HIV preventive interventions. The research contributions of developed countries to understanding sexually transmitted HIV have long recognized the influence of substance use and sex networks. Research in developing countries has contributed significantly to the environmental and biological understanding of HIV sexual transmission dynamics. Although much of the research in developing countries has recruited participants from venues where alcohol or other substance use is pervasive (e.g., truck stops), few studies have explicitly examined the relationship between HIV sex risk and substance use in these contexts. Finally, sex network characteristics and structural features, which have been found to play identifiable roles in the spread of HIV, are measurable at the individual level and can contribute substantively to the development and the evaluation of HIV-preventive interventions implemented at the network or community level.
本文(1)回顾了相关研究,以确定在发达国家和发展中国家可能构成艾滋病毒异性传播基础的机制;(2)研究了性行为与物质使用导致艾滋病毒传播风险之间的联系;(3)描述了与制定艾滋病毒预防干预措施相关的性网络测量问题。发达国家在理解性传播艾滋病毒方面的研究贡献长期以来一直认识到物质使用和性网络的影响。发展中国家的研究对艾滋病毒性传播动态的环境和生物学理解做出了重大贡献。尽管发展中国家的许多研究招募的参与者来自酒精或其他物质使用普遍存在的场所(如卡车停靠点),但很少有研究明确考察这些背景下艾滋病毒性行为风险与物质使用之间的关系。最后,已发现性网络特征和结构特征在艾滋病毒传播中发挥可识别的作用,这些特征可在个体层面进行测量,并能为在网络或社区层面实施的艾滋病毒预防干预措施的制定和评估做出实质性贡献。