Center for Public Health and Human Rights, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 615 N, Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2013 May 17;13:482. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-482.
BACKGROUND: Social and structural factors are now well accepted as determinants of HIV vulnerabilities. These factors are representative of social, economic, organizational and political inequities. Associated with an improved understanding of multiple levels of HIV risk has been the recognition of the need to implement multi-level HIV prevention strategies. Prevention sciences research and programming aiming to decrease HIV incidence requires epidemiologic studies to collect data on multiple levels of risk to inform combination HIV prevention packages. DISCUSSION: Proximal individual-level risks, such as sharing injection devices and unprotected penile-vaginal or penile-anal sex, are necessary in mediating HIV acquisition and transmission. However, higher order social and structural-level risks can facilitate or reduce HIV transmission on population levels. Data characterizing these risks is often far more actionable than characterizing individual-level risks. We propose a modified social ecological model (MSEM) to help visualize multi-level domains of HIV infection risks and guide the development of epidemiologic HIV studies. Such a model may inform research in epidemiology and prevention sciences, particularly for key populations including men who have sex with men (MSM), people who inject drugs (PID), and sex workers. The MSEM builds on existing frameworks by examining multi-level risk contexts for HIV infection and situating individual HIV infection risks within wider network, community, and public policy contexts as well as epidemic stage. The utility of the MSEM is demonstrated with case studies of HIV risk among PID and MSM. SUMMARY: The MSEM is a flexible model for guiding epidemiologic studies among key populations at risk for HIV in diverse sociocultural contexts. Successful HIV prevention strategies for key populations require effective integration of evidence-based biomedical, behavioral, and structural interventions. While the focus of epidemiologic studies has traditionally been on describing individual-level risk factors, the future necessitates comprehensive epidemiologic data characterizing multiple levels of HIV risk.
背景:社会和结构性因素现已被广泛认为是 HIV 易感性的决定因素。这些因素代表了社会、经济、组织和政治不平等。随着对 HIV 风险多层次的理解不断提高,人们认识到需要实施多层次的 HIV 预防策略。旨在降低 HIV 发病率的预防科学研究和规划需要流行病学研究收集多个层面的风险数据,为组合 HIV 预防方案提供信息。
讨论:近端个体层面的风险,如共用注射器具以及无保护的阴茎-阴道或阴茎-肛门性行为,在介导 HIV 获得和传播方面是必要的。然而,更高层次的社会和结构性风险可以在人群层面上促进或减少 HIV 传播。描述这些风险的数据通常比描述个体层面风险的数据更具可操作性。我们提出了一个改良的社会生态学模型(MSEM)来帮助可视化 HIV 感染风险的多层次领域,并指导流行病学 HIV 研究的开展。这种模型可以为流行病学和预防科学研究提供信息,特别是针对包括男男性行为者(MSM)、注射毒品者(PID)和性工作者在内的重点人群。该模型通过检查 HIV 感染的多层次风险背景,并将个体 HIV 感染风险置于更广泛的网络、社区和公共政策背景以及流行阶段中,对现有框架进行了扩展。通过对 PID 和 MSM 中的 HIV 风险的案例研究,展示了 MSEM 的实用性。
总结:MSEM 是一个灵活的模型,可用于指导在不同社会文化背景下处于 HIV 风险中的重点人群的流行病学研究。成功的重点人群 HIV 预防策略需要有效整合基于证据的生物医学、行为和结构性干预措施。虽然流行病学研究的重点传统上一直是描述个体层面的风险因素,但未来需要全面的流行病学数据来描述多个层面的 HIV 风险。
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