|
Study: Poverty, More than
Race, Linked to HIV
First-of-its-Kind Analysis by U.S. Government Finds HIV Is
Epidemic in Certain Poverty-Stricken Urban Areas
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/07/19/health/main6691867.shtml
(AP) Poverty is perhaps the most important factor in whether
inner-city heterosexuals are infected with the AIDS virus,
according to the first government study of its kind.
The study, released Monday, suggests that HIV is epidemic in
certain poverty-stricken urban neighborhoods. And, more
significantly, poor heterosexuals in those neighborhoods were
twice as likely to be infected as heterosexuals who lived in the
same community but had more money.
Federal scientists found that race was not a factor - there were
no significant differences between blacks, whites or Hispanics.
Health officials have long believed poverty drives HIV
epidemics, but there have been few studies to back that up. Some
research actually contradicts that belief: Studies in Tanzania,
Kenya and some other African countries actually found that
wealthy people were more likely to be infected than the poor.
"In the United States, we haven't have a history of looking in
depth at the association between poverty and HIV," said Dr.
Jonathan Mermin, director of HIV/AIDS Prevention for the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. Mermin oversees the CDC team
that did the new study.
More often, studies have focused on the race of HIV patients,
their sexual orientation, or whether or not they use intravenous
drugs.
The CDC report was released at the international AIDS conference
in Vienna.
The study involved a survey in 2006 and 2007 of 9,000
heterosexual adults, ages 18 to 50. They answered questions on a
computer about their income, condom use and other details and
were given HIV tests.
The research was done in high-poverty neighborhoods in 23 U.S.
cities. It focused on heterosexuals who don't use intravenous
drugs; that group accounts for about 28 percent of Americans
living with HIV. It did not involve gay or bisexual men, who
have the highest rates of HIV in the United States.
The results: HIV was detected in 2.4 percent of the people who
were living below the federal poverty line, which in 2007 was an
annual income of roughly $10,000 or less for an individual. The
2.4 percent translates to roughly 1 in 42 people.
In contrast, infections were found in 1.2 percent of people in
the same neighborhoods who made more money than the federal
poverty guideline. That's 1 in 83 people.
Both rates were higher than the national average, which is 0.45
percent, or 1 in 222 people.
The results suggest that people in low-income neighborhoods are
more likely to be infected because they live among more people
who are infected. Perhaps more people in such neighborhoods have
used illegal drugs or had other experiences that put them at
higher risk, Mermin said.
"It's epidemiological bad luck," he said. He described the
situation: "I'm in a community where when I meet a new (sexual)
partner, the chance that they would have HIV is much higher than
if I were wealthy and living in another geographical area."
Officials need to start looking at the AIDS epidemic in a
different light, said Dr. Carlos del Rio, who chairs global
health studies at Emory University's school of public health.
"You talk about 'Can we decrease the HIV burden in the United
States?' I would say, 'What can we do to decrease poverty in the
United States?"' del Rio said.
He noted there are diseases that are more prevalent in certain
racial groups, for genetic reasons. Sickle cell disease, which
is most prevalent in blacks, is one example.
But there's no clear biological reason why the infection rate is
eight times higher in blacks than whites, and three times higher
in Hispanics than whites. But understanding that blacks are
disproportionately poor probably does explain why the rates are
higher, del Rio said.
He was an author of a smaller, recent study that found that 60
percent of Atlanta's HIV cases were located in a downtown area
of the city with high proportions of blacks, IV drug users and
people living in poverty.
An estimated 1 in 272 Americans is infected with HIV, according
to 2006 estimates. In other terms, more than 1.1 million
Americans are living with the AIDS virus. The number has grown
since 2006, CDC officials believe.
Officials believe the annual number of new HIV infections has
been hovering around 55,000 a year since the late 1990s.
|