Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Ministry of Health and Child Care.
AIDS. 2019 Jan 27;33(1):123-131. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000002066.
HIV took off rapidly in Zimbabwe during the 1980s. Yet, between 1998 and 2003, as the economy faltered, HIV prevalence declined abruptly and without clear explanation.
We reviewed epidemiological, behavioural, and economic data over three decades to understand changes in economic conditions, migrant labour and sex work that may account for observed fluctuations in Zimbabwe's HIV epidemic. Potential biases related to changing epidemic paradigms and data sources were examined.
Early studies describe rural poverty, male migrant labour and sex work as conditions facilitating HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) transmission. By the mid-1990s, as Zimbabwe's epidemic became more generalized, research focus shifted to general population household surveys. Yet, less than half as many men than women were found at home during surveys in the 1990s, increasing to 80% during the years of economic decline. Other studies suggest that male demand for sex work fell abruptly as migrant workers were laid off, picking up again when the economy rebounded after 2009. Numbers of clients reported by sex workers, and their STI rates, followed similar patterns reaching a nadir in the early 2000s. Studies from 2009 describe a return to more active sex work, linked to increasing client demand, as well as a revitalized programme reaching sex workers.
The importance of the downturn in migrant labour and resultant changes in sex work may be underestimated as drivers of Zimbabwe's rapid HIV incidence and prevalence declines. Household surveys underrepresent populations at the highest risk of HIV/STI acquisition and transmission, and these biases vary with changing economic conditions.
20 世纪 80 年代,津巴布韦的艾滋病毒迅速蔓延。然而,1998 年至 2003 年间,随着经济的衰退,艾滋病毒的流行率突然急剧下降,而且没有明确的解释。
我们回顾了三十年来的流行病学、行为和经济数据,以了解经济状况的变化、移民劳工和性工作者的变化,这些变化可能导致津巴布韦艾滋病毒流行的波动。还检查了与流行模式和数据源变化相关的潜在偏差。
早期的研究描述了农村贫困、男性移民劳工和性工作者是促进艾滋病毒/性传播感染(STI)传播的条件。到 20 世纪 90 年代中期,随着津巴布韦的艾滋病疫情变得更加普遍,研究重点转向了一般人群的家庭调查。然而,在 90 年代的调查中,在家中的男性人数不到女性的一半,在经济衰退期间增加到 80%。其他研究表明,随着移民工人下岗,男性对性工作的需求突然下降,在 2009 年经济复苏后再次上升。性工作者报告的客户数量及其性传播感染率也呈现出类似的模式,在 21 世纪初达到最低点。2009 年的研究描述了性工作的恢复,这与客户需求的增加以及重新活跃起来的针对性工作者的项目有关。
移民劳工减少和性工作变化的重要性可能被低估为津巴布韦艾滋病毒发病率和流行率迅速下降的驱动因素。家庭调查低估了最容易感染艾滋病毒/性传播感染的人群,而且这些偏差随着经济条件的变化而变化。