Valleroy L A, Harris J R, Way P O
AIDS Division, US Agency for International Development, Washington, DC 20523.
AIDS. 1990 Jul;4(7):667-72. doi: 10.1097/00002030-199007000-00010.
In this study we have used a mathematical projections model and HIV-1 seroprevalence data from samples of pregnant women to estimate infant HIV-1-infection prevalence and HIV-1-attributable mortality among children. This paper presents the results of samples from six developing country capitals and Martinique. The estimated impact of HIV-1 infection on overall infant mortality is low in regions where maternal HIV-1 seroprevalence is low and overall infant mortality is high, but substantial in locations where either maternal HIV-1 seroprevalence is high, or where maternal HIV-1 seroprevalence is moderate and overall infant mortality is low. The estimates for child (ages 1-4 years) and under-5 mortality suggest that the impact of HIV-1 infection on overall mortality in children may exceed the impact on infant mortality. The recent gains made in ensuring child survival are likely to be increasingly reversed in regions where HIV-1 infection is being transmitted in a substantial proportion of pregnancies and births.
在本研究中,我们使用了一个数学预测模型以及来自孕妇样本的HIV-1血清流行率数据,来估计婴儿HIV-1感染率以及儿童中HIV-1所致死亡率。本文展示了来自六个发展中国家首都和马提尼克岛的样本结果。在孕产妇HIV-1血清流行率低且婴儿总体死亡率高的地区,HIV-1感染对婴儿总体死亡率的估计影响较低,但在孕产妇HIV-1血清流行率高的地区,或孕产妇HIV-1血清流行率中等且婴儿总体死亡率低的地区,影响则相当大。对儿童(1至4岁)和5岁以下儿童死亡率的估计表明,HIV-1感染对儿童总体死亡率的影响可能超过对婴儿死亡率的影响。在相当比例的怀孕和分娩中传播HIV-1感染的地区,近期在确保儿童生存方面取得的进展可能会越来越多地逆转。