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解构综合征:艾滋病毒感染者多种共病的多重聚类层次。

Deconstructing Syndemics: The Many Layers of Clustering Multi-Comorbidities in People Living with HIV.

机构信息

Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA.

Office of AIDS Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20852, USA.

出版信息

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Jun 30;17(13):4704. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17134704.

Abstract

The HIV epidemic has dramatically changed over the past 30 years; there are now fewer newly infected people (especially children), fewer AIDS-related deaths, and more people with HIV (PWH) receiving treatment. However, the HIV epidemic is far from over. Despite the tremendous advances in anti-retroviral therapies (ART) and the implementation of ART regimens, HIV incidence (number of new infections over a defined period of time) and prevalence (the burden of HIV infection) in certain regions of the world and socio-economic groups are still on the rise. HIV continues to disproportionally affect highly marginalized populations that constitute higher-risk and stigmatized groups, underserved and/or neglected populations. In addition, it is not uncommon for PWH to suffer enhanced debilitating conditions resulting from the synergistic interactions of both communicable diseases (CDs) and non-communicable diseases (NCDs). While research utilizing only a comorbidities framework has advanced our understanding of the biological settings of the co-occurring conditions from a molecular and mechanistic view, harmful interactions between comorbidities are often overlooked, particularly under adverse socio-economical and behavioral circumstances, likely prompting disease clustering in PWH. Synergistic epidemics (syndemics) research aims to capture these understudied interactions: the mainly non-biological aspects that are central to interpret disease clustering in the comorbidities/multi-morbidities only framework. Connecting population-level clustering of social and health problems through syndemic interventions has proved to be a critical knowledge gap that will need to be addressed in order to improve prevention and care strategies and bring us a step closer to ending the HIV epidemic.

摘要

艾滋病病毒(HIV)疫情在过去 30 年中发生了巨大变化;新感染人数(尤其是儿童)减少,艾滋病相关死亡人数减少,接受治疗的 HIV 感染者(PWH)人数增加。然而,HIV 疫情远未结束。尽管抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)取得了巨大进展,并且实施了 ART 方案,但世界某些地区和社会经济群体的 HIV 发病率(在特定时间段内新感染人数)和流行率(HIV 感染负担)仍在上升。HIV 继续不成比例地影响到那些构成高风险和受污名化群体、服务不足和/或被忽视的高度边缘化人群。此外,PWH 经常会因传染性疾病(CDs)和非传染性疾病(NCDs)的协同相互作用而遭受更多的衰弱状况,这种情况并不少见。虽然仅使用合并症框架的研究已经从分子和机制角度推进了我们对合并症共同发生条件的生物学背景的理解,但合并症之间的有害相互作用经常被忽视,尤其是在不利的社会经济和行为环境下,这可能导致 PWH 中的疾病聚集。协同流行(syndemics)研究旨在捕捉这些研究不足的相互作用:主要是非生物学方面,对于在合并症/多种合并症的单一框架中解释疾病聚集至关重要。通过协同流行干预措施连接人群层面的社会和健康问题聚类,已被证明是一个关键的知识差距,需要加以解决,以改进预防和护理策略,并使我们更接近终结 HIV 疫情。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a49e/7369980/fd7bdf263e4a/ijerph-17-04704-g001.jpg

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