Rothenberg R
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Sex Transm Infect. 2007 Feb;83(1):10-5. doi: 10.1136/sti.2006.017269.
In industrialised countries, a rapid epidemic phase of HIV transmission has largely given way to more moderated endemic transmission. The dynamics of endemic transmission may differ substantially from those generating epidemic spread. We hypothesise that three elements play an important role in maintaining endemicity in high prevalence urban environments. First, persons are likely to be subject to multiple risks from multiple sources rather than engaging in a single, hierarchically classified, risk behaviour. Second, the network structure in these environments may include a substrate of "fixed" factors (a large connected component, a characteristic degree distribution and small world phenomenon) upon which is superimposed a number of variable factors (transitivity, assortativity) that determine the level of prevalence. Third, the geographic range of persons in these milieux is constricted, making it likely that new partners will already be connected. The confluence of these three factors assures the ongoing risk bombardment needed for maintenance of endemicity. Further empirical and theoretical analysis will be required in order to validate this hypothesis.
在工业化国家,艾滋病病毒传播的快速流行阶段在很大程度上已让位于更为缓和的地方性传播。地方性传播的动态过程可能与导致流行传播的动态过程有很大不同。我们假设,有三个因素在高流行率城市环境中维持地方性流行方面发挥着重要作用。首先,人们可能面临来自多个来源的多种风险,而不是只从事单一的、按等级分类的风险行为。其次,这些环境中的网络结构可能包括一个“固定”因素的基础(一个大的连通组件、特征度分布和小世界现象),在这个基础上叠加了一些可变因素(传递性、同配性),这些可变因素决定了流行程度。第三,这些环境中人们的地理范围受到限制,这使得新的性伴很可能已经相互关联。这三个因素的共同作用确保了维持地方性流行所需的持续风险冲击。为了验证这一假设,还需要进一步的实证和理论分析。