Leonard Cheshire Disability and Inclusive Development Centre, University College London, London, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2013 Jan;77:31-40. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.10.024. Epub 2012 Nov 7.
The recent AIDS and Disability Partners Forum at the UN General Assembly High Level Meetings on AIDS in New York in June 2011 and the International AIDS Conference in Washington, DC in July 2012 underscores the growing attention to the impact of HIV and AIDS on persons with disabilities. However, research on AIDS and disability, particularly a solid evidence base upon which to build policy and programming remains thin, scattered and difficult to access. In this review paper, we summarise what is currently known about the intersection between HIV and AIDS and disability, paying particular attention to the small but emerging body of epidemiology data on the prevalence of HIV for people with disabilities, as well as the increasing understanding of HIV risk factors for people with disabilities. We find that the number of papers in the peer-reviewed literature remains distressingly small. Over the past 20 years an average of 5 articles on some aspect of disability and HIV and AIDS were published annually in the peer-reviewed literature from 1990 to 2000, increasing slightly to an average of 6 per year from 2000 to 2010. Given the vast amount of research around HIV and AIDS and the thousands of articles on the subject published in the peer-reviewed literature annually, the continuing lack of attention to HIV and AIDS among this at risk population, now estimated to make up 15% of the world's population, is striking. However, the statistics, while too limited at this point to make definitive conclusions, increasingly suggest at least an equal HIV prevalence rate for people with disabilities as for their non-disabled peers.
2011 年 6 月在纽约举行的联合国大会艾滋病问题高级别会议上的艾滋病和残疾问题伙伴论坛以及 2012 年 7 月在华盛顿特区举行的国际艾滋病会议强调了对艾滋病毒和艾滋病对残疾人影响的日益关注。然而,艾滋病和残疾问题的研究,特别是用以制定政策和规划的坚实证据基础仍然薄弱、分散且难以获取。在这篇综述论文中,我们总结了目前已知的艾滋病毒和艾滋病与残疾之间的交集,特别关注残疾人群中艾滋病毒流行率的少量但不断增加的流行病学数据,以及对残疾人群艾滋病毒风险因素的日益理解。我们发现,同行评议文献中的论文数量仍然少得令人痛心。在过去的 20 年中,1990 年至 2000 年期间,每年平均有 5 篇关于残疾和艾滋病毒/艾滋病某个方面的文章发表在同行评议文献中,从 2000 年至 2010 年略有增加,平均每年有 6 篇。鉴于围绕艾滋病毒和艾滋病进行的大量研究以及每年在同行评议文献中发表的数千篇关于该主题的文章,在这个高危人群中,艾滋病毒和艾滋病继续受到关注,这令人震惊。目前,残疾人群估计占世界人口的 15%。然而,这些统计数据虽然目前还过于有限,无法得出明确的结论,但越来越多地表明,残疾人和非残疾同龄人感染艾滋病毒的比率至少相等。