Georgia Parents for Responsible Health Education, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2011 Aug;1230:59-73. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2011.06079.x.
The last few decades have provided new perspectives on the increasingly complex interrelationships between the evolutionary epidemiology of STDs and their agents, human sexuality, and economic, social, cultural, and technological developments. Rapidly emerging HIV/AIDS, globalization, migration, and information technology are some factors that stress the importance of focusing on how old and new sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are spread, both in and between networks and populations. This review of determinants of STI transmission emphasizes their impact on disease prevalence and transmission, as well as their potential for affecting the agents themselves--directly or indirectly. Interventions aiming to control the spread of STIs and HIV on the different levels of society need to be adapted to the specific environment and need to integrate social structures, such as economic and gender inequality and mobility, as well as the great variability and complexity of sexual behavior.
过去几十年为性传播疾病及其病原体的进化流行病学与人类性行为,以及经济、社会、文化和技术发展之间日益复杂的相互关系提供了新的视角。迅速出现的艾滋病毒/艾滋病、全球化、移徙和信息技术是一些强调重视新旧性传播感染(性病)在网络和人群内部和之间传播方式的重要因素。对性传播感染传播决定因素的这一回顾强调了它们对疾病流行和传播的影响,以及它们直接或间接地影响病原体本身的潜力。旨在控制社会不同层面的性传播感染和艾滋病毒传播的干预措施需要适应特定环境,并整合社会结构,如经济和性别不平等以及流动性,以及性行为的巨大可变性和复杂性。