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1.
Objectives. We explored how variance in HIV infection is distributed across multiple geographical scales among people who inject drugs (PWID) in the United States, overall and within racial/ethnic groups.Methods. People who inject drugs (n = 9077) were recruited via respondent-driven sampling from 19 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2009 National HIV Behavioral Surveillance system. We used multilevel modeling to determine the percentage of variance in HIV infection explained by zip codes, counties, and MSAs where PWID lived, overall and for specific racial/ethnic groups.Results. Collectively, zip codes, counties, and MSAs explained 29% of variance in HIV infection. Within specific racial/ethnic groups, all 3 scales explained variance in HIV infection among non-Hispanic/Latino White PWID (4.3%, 0.2%, and 7.5%, respectively), MSAs explained variance among Hispanic/Latino PWID (10.1%), and counties explained variance among non-Hispanic/Latino Black PWID (6.9%).Conclusions. Exposure to potential determinants of HIV infection at zip codes, counties, and MSAs may vary for different racial/ethnic groups of PWID, and may reveal opportunities to identify and ameliorate intraracial inequities in exposure to determinants of HIV infection at these geographical scales.Since the mid-1990s, there has been an increase in studies evaluating whether features of the social, economic, physical, and political environment (i.e., place characteristics) affect health. This focus on place characteristics is evident in the development of theories conceptualizing place characteristics as health determinants,1–3 in the use of geospatial and systematic social observation methods to measure place characteristics,4–10 in the application of multilevel modeling to assess the potential impacts of place characteristics,11–18 and in the recognition that interventions should not solely encourage individual behavior change but also modify environmental features.3,16,19Literature emerging from this field of research demonstrates that place characteristics operationalized at different geographical scales influence psychosocial processes and individual behaviors that increase vulnerability to several health outcomes. With rare exception,20–24 however, studies of place and health typically assess the potential influence of place characteristics at a single geographical scale and do not simultaneously evaluate characteristics of other geographical scales. For example, several studies, including our own,25,26 sample participants from a single metropolitan statistical area (MSA) to assess the relationships of census tract characteristics to health, without sampling participants from multiple MSAs to simultaneously assess the relationships of tract-, county-, and MSA-level characteristics to health.25–32 The decision to focus on characteristics of a single geographical scale may arise because of data availability, cost constraints, or feasibility.Studies of place and health that focus on a single geographical scale, however, may misspecify relationships and hinder the exploration of causal pathways in 2 ways. First, studies that focus on features measured at a single geographical scale may overlook potential health determinants that are operationalized at other geographical scales. For instance, research assessing the relationships of features of neighborhoods (e.g., economic deprivation, racial/ethnic composition, policing practices, and “crackdowns”) cannot determine the influence of policies, laws, and governmental expenditures that are operationalized at county, MSA, and state levels, and shape neighborhood environments. Second, studies of features of a single geographical scale cannot determine whether relationships between characteristics operating at one geographical scale are confounded, mediated, or modified by characteristics of other geographic scales.3,16,33 The possibility that at least 1 of these mechanisms can occur has been demonstrated in research conducted by Warner and Gomez, which suggests that, among Black women diagnosed with breast cancer, residing in census blocks with high concentrations of Black residents is more protective against mortality in more racially segregated metropolitan areas than less racially segregated metropolitan areas.34In addition, research assessing the association of place-based factors with health outcomes rarely highlights the extent to which variance in health outcomes is explained by place and place-based factors. Determining whether health outcomes vary geographically can generate hypotheses about inequities in exposure to potential place-based determinants of health, and thereby inform how interventions and social policies are developed and spatially concentrated.35The present study illustrates the generative possibilities of extending research beyond a single geographical scale by achieving 2 primary aims. The study’s first aim is to determine the share of total variance in HIV infection that is apportioned to zip codes, counties, and MSAs among people who inject drugs (PWID). In the United States, PWID account for 22% of people living with HIV,36 and a growing body of literature demonstrates that features of neighborhoods such as census-tract racial composition and block-level social or physical disorder are associated with HIV-related outcomes among PWID,37,38 as are features of MSAs, including drug-related law enforcement, income inequality, residential segregation, and health service access.39–41 Revealing the geographical scale to which variance in HIV infection is apportioned among PWID can stimulate hypotheses about inequities in exposure to place-based determinants of HIV and inform the development and tailoring of place-based interventions. For example, finding high MSA-level variance in HIV infection may support analyses of whether MSA-level variations in health care service access predict variance in HIV serostatus and, if they do, support interventions to increase health care access in low-access MSAs. In contrast, if little to no variance in HIV infection among PWID is apportioned to MSAs, PWID may encounter a relatively uniform exposure to health care service access.Previous studies have found that variance in some health outcomes vary across racial/ethnic groups.42,43 The second aim of this study therefore tests the hypothesis that variance in HIV infection will differ within each of 3 racial/ethnic groups of PWID: non-Hispanic/Latino Whites, non-Hispanic/Latino Blacks, and Hispanics/Latinos.  相似文献   
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BACKGROUND: Volunteer black adolescent females from neighborhoods characterized by high rates of unemployment, substance abuse, violence, and sexually transmitted disease were studied to determine the frequency of condom use and unprotected vaginal sex with steady, older partners during various time periods over the previous 6 months. GOAL: To examine associations between having male sex partners who were typically older (by at least 2 years) and adolescent females' sexually transmitted disease (STD)/HIV-associated sexual risk behaviors. STUDY DESIGN: In this cross-sectional study, 522 sexually active black adolescent females completed a questionnaire and a structured interview, of which a portion assessed the age difference between the adolescents and their typical sex partners. The adolescents' ages, length of relationship and their use of hormonal contraception were identified as covariates. Adjusted odds ratios (AOR), their 95% confidence intervals, and respective P values were calculated to detect significant associations. RESULTS: Sixty-two percent of the adolescents reported their typical sex partners were at least 2 years older. These adolescents were more likely to report never using condoms during the most recent sexual encounter (AOR = 2.0), during the last five sexual encounters (AOR = 2.0), and during the past month (AOR = 2.2). Similarly, having older partners was associated with greater odds of reporting any unprotected vaginal sex in the past 30 days (AOR = 1.7) or the past 6 months (AOR = 1.5). CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that many adolescent females have sex partners who are at least 2 years older and that their relationship dynamics do not favor the adoption and maintenance of behavior protective against STD or HIV infection. Prevention programs could include training designed to help adolescent females overcome barriers to safer sex with older male partners.  相似文献   
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STUDY OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine correlates of worry about pregnancy among a high-risk sample of low-income African-American adolescent females. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that perceived male partner desire for pregnancy and level of sexual communication would be independently associated with adolescent females' worry about becoming pregnant. DESIGN: A survey of sexually active African-American adolescent females, 14-18 years of age. SETTING: Recruitment was conducted in low-income neighborhoods of Birmingham, Alabama, characterized by high rates of unemployment, substance abuse, violence, and teen pregnancy. PARTICIPANTS: Adolescents (N = 522) completed a survey and a face-to-face interview, and provided a urine specimen for pregnancy testing. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Nonpregnant adolescents reporting steady relationships with a male sex partner (over the past 6 months) and indicating no immediate desire to become pregnant were included in the analysis (n = 196). Two questionnaire items assessed level of worry about becoming pregnant. RESULTS: Compared to adolescent females reporting their partner did not desire pregnancy, those perceiving their partner desired pregnancy were nearly three times more likely to experience high worry about becoming pregnant (AOR = 2.85; P =.009). Engaging in sex unprotected by a condom was an equally important correlate of high worry (AOR = 2.84; P =.013). Level of communication between partners about pregnancy prevention was not significant. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescent females may experience high worry about becoming pregnant due to desires of their male partner as well as their recent sexual risk behavior.  相似文献   
6.

Objectives

Testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is the key first step in HIV treatment and prevention. In 2006, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended annual HIV testing for people at high risk for HIV infection. We evaluated HIV testing among men with high-risk heterosexual (HRH) contact and sexually active men who have sex with men (MSM) before and after the CDC recommendations.

Methods

We used data from the National Survey of Family Growth, 2002 and 2006–2010, to assess proportions of HRH respondents and MSM reporting HIV testing in the prior 12 months, compare rates of testing before and after release of the 2006 CDC HIV testing guidelines, and examine demographic variables and receipt of health-care services as correlates of HIV testing.

Results

Among MSM, the proportion tested was 37.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] 28.2, 47.2) in 2002, 38.2% (95% CI 25.9, 52.2) in 2006–2008, and 41.7% (95% CI 29.2, 55.3) in 2008–2010; among HRH respondents, the proportion was 23.7% (95% CI 20.5, 27.3) in 2002, 24.5% (95% CI 20.9, 28.7) in 2006–2008, and 23.9% (95% CI 20.2, 28.1) in 2008–2010. HIV testing was more likely among MSM and HRH respondents who received testing or treatment for sexually transmitted disease in the prior 12 months, received a physical examination in the prior 12 months (MSM only), or were incarcerated in the prior 12 months.

Conclusions

The rate of annual HIV testing was low for men with sexual risk for HIV infection, and little improvement took place from 2002 to 2006–2010. Interventions aimed at men at risk, especially MSM, in both nonmedical and health-care settings, likely could increase HIV testing.New infections of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) occur in the United States at a rate of approximately 50,000 per year, driven mostly by sexual transmission, particularly among men who have sex with men (MSM).1 In 2010, male-to-male sexual contact accounted for 63% of new HIV infections (78% among males), and heterosexual contact accounted for 25% of new HIV infections (11% among males).1,2 Although overall incidence has been relatively stable since 2006, among young MSM, particularly young black MSM, new infections continue to increase.1,3An estimated 14% of adults and adolescents living with HIV infection in the United States are undiagnosed, of whom 11% are males with high-risk heterosexual (HRH) contact and 62% are MSM.4 To increase the proportion of HIV-infected people who are aware of their status and link them to treatment and prevention services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended in 2006 that all people aged 13–64 years be tested at least once for HIV infection and that people at high risk for HIV infection, including men with HRH contact and sexually active MSM,5 be tested annually.Using data from multiple waves of a nationally representative survey, we examined the percentage of HRH and MSM respondents who reported having been tested for HIV in the prior 12 months. We compared rates of testing before and after the revised HIV testing guidelines5 were released by CDC in 2006. Additionally, because the 2006 CDC guidelines recommended that HIV screening be conducted as part of routine clinical care in all health-care settings,5 we examined HIV testing among men stratified by their reported use of health-care services in the prior 12 months and by several sociodemographic variables.  相似文献   
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Approximately 20 million people in the United States have genital human papillomavirus (HPV), a sexually transmitted infection linked to cancer. We examined the news information presented about the HPV vaccine in major U.S. newspapers over the 19 months following its Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. To answer the question of how news information is presented in ways that might influence public health, we explored the frequency of cancer prevention and sexually transmitted infection prevention message frames used to describe the HPV vaccine, the extent to which journalists relied on official sources, and the presence of personal examples. A content analysis of 547 newspaper articles revealed that less than half of the articles provided detailed health information. Of the articles that contained a message frame, cancer prevention was most frequently employed. Government/political sources, medical doctors, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were the most commonly cited sources. Finally, we found that only 16% of all the articles we sampled featured personal accounts. Together, our findings suggest that U.S. newspaper coverage lacked detailed information about both HPV and the HPV vaccine in spite of federal approval of the vaccine, legal mandates for the vaccine, and a widespread information campaign. Implications for public health are discussed.  相似文献   
9.
This study assessed the prevalence of exchanging sex for money or drugs among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the 2011 US National HIV Behavioral Surveillance system. Prevalence of HIV, being HIV-positive but unaware (HIV-positive–unaware), risk behaviors and use of services were compared between MSM who did and did not receive money or drugs from one or more casual male partners in exchange for oral or anal sex in the past 12 months. Among 8411 MSM, 7.0 % exchanged sex. MSM who exchanged sex were more likely to be non-Hispanic black, live in poverty, have injected drugs, have multiple condomless anal sex partners, be HIV-positive and be HIV-positive–unaware. In multivariable analysis, exchange sex was associated with being HIV-positive–unaware (aPR 1.34, 95 % CI 1.05–1.69) after adjusting for race/ethnicity, age, education, poverty, and injecting drugs. MSM who exchange sex represent an important group to reach with HIV prevention, testing, and care services as they were more likely to report behavioral risk factors that put them at risk of HIV.  相似文献   
10.
Heterosexual anal intercourse (HAI) is not an uncommon behavior and it confers a higher risk of HIV transmission than vaginal intercourse. We examined data from heterosexuals recruited in 20 US cities for the 2013 National HIV Behavioral Surveillance system. We assessed correlates of reporting HAI in the previous year. Then, among people reporting HAI in the past year, we assessed what event-level factors are associated with having HAI at last sex. Thirty percent of women and 35 % of men reported HAI in the past year. Among people who had HAI in the past year, those who had HAI at last sex were more likely to have a partner who was HIV-positive or of unknown status or to have exchanged money or drugs for sex at last sex. Information that highlights the risk of HIV transmission associated with HAI would complement existing HIV prevention messages focused on heterosexuals in the U.S.  相似文献   
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