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Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS

BACKGROUND: Among the largest US metropolitan areas, trends in mortality rates for injection drug users (IDUs) with AIDS vary substantially. Ecosocial, risk environment and dialectical theories suggest many metropolitan areas characteristics that might drive this variation. We assess metropolitan ar...

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Autores principales: Friedman, Samuel R., West, Brooke S., Pouget, Enrique R., Hall, H. Irene, Cantrell, Jennifer, Tempalski, Barbara, Chatterjee, Sudip, Hu, Xiaohong, Cooper, Hannah L. F., Galea, Sandro, Des Jarlais, Don C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057201
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author Friedman, Samuel R.
West, Brooke S.
Pouget, Enrique R.
Hall, H. Irene
Cantrell, Jennifer
Tempalski, Barbara
Chatterjee, Sudip
Hu, Xiaohong
Cooper, Hannah L. F.
Galea, Sandro
Des Jarlais, Don C.
author_facet Friedman, Samuel R.
West, Brooke S.
Pouget, Enrique R.
Hall, H. Irene
Cantrell, Jennifer
Tempalski, Barbara
Chatterjee, Sudip
Hu, Xiaohong
Cooper, Hannah L. F.
Galea, Sandro
Des Jarlais, Don C.
author_sort Friedman, Samuel R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Among the largest US metropolitan areas, trends in mortality rates for injection drug users (IDUs) with AIDS vary substantially. Ecosocial, risk environment and dialectical theories suggest many metropolitan areas characteristics that might drive this variation. We assess metropolitan area characteristics associated with decline in mortality rates among IDUs living with AIDS (per 10,000 adult MSA residents) after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was developed. METHODS: This is an ecological cohort study of 86 large US metropolitan areas from 1993–2006. The proportional rate of decline in mortality among IDUs diagnosed with AIDS (as a proportion of adult residents) from 1993–1995 to 2004–2006 was the outcome of interest. This rate of decline was modeled as a function of MSA-level variables suggested by ecosocial, risk environment and dialectical theories. In multiple regression analyses, we used 1993–1995 mortality rates to (partially) control for pre-HAART epidemic history and study how other independent variables affected the outcomes. RESULTS: In multivariable models, pre-HAART to HAART era increases in ‘hard drug’ arrest rates and higher pre-HAART income inequality were associated with lower relative declines in mortality rates. Pre-HAART per capita health expenditure and drug abuse treatment rates, and pre- to HAART-era increases in HIV counseling and testing rates, were weakly associated with greater decline in AIDS mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Mortality among IDUs living with AIDS might be decreased by reducing metropolitan income inequality, increasing public health expenditures, and perhaps increasing drug abuse treatment and HIV testing services. Given prior evidence that drug-related arrest rates are associated with higher HIV prevalence rates among IDUs and do not seem to decrease IDU population prevalence, changes in laws and policing practices to reduce such arrests while still protecting public order should be considered.
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spelling pubmed-35788042013-02-22 Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS Friedman, Samuel R. West, Brooke S. Pouget, Enrique R. Hall, H. Irene Cantrell, Jennifer Tempalski, Barbara Chatterjee, Sudip Hu, Xiaohong Cooper, Hannah L. F. Galea, Sandro Des Jarlais, Don C. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Among the largest US metropolitan areas, trends in mortality rates for injection drug users (IDUs) with AIDS vary substantially. Ecosocial, risk environment and dialectical theories suggest many metropolitan areas characteristics that might drive this variation. We assess metropolitan area characteristics associated with decline in mortality rates among IDUs living with AIDS (per 10,000 adult MSA residents) after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was developed. METHODS: This is an ecological cohort study of 86 large US metropolitan areas from 1993–2006. The proportional rate of decline in mortality among IDUs diagnosed with AIDS (as a proportion of adult residents) from 1993–1995 to 2004–2006 was the outcome of interest. This rate of decline was modeled as a function of MSA-level variables suggested by ecosocial, risk environment and dialectical theories. In multiple regression analyses, we used 1993–1995 mortality rates to (partially) control for pre-HAART epidemic history and study how other independent variables affected the outcomes. RESULTS: In multivariable models, pre-HAART to HAART era increases in ‘hard drug’ arrest rates and higher pre-HAART income inequality were associated with lower relative declines in mortality rates. Pre-HAART per capita health expenditure and drug abuse treatment rates, and pre- to HAART-era increases in HIV counseling and testing rates, were weakly associated with greater decline in AIDS mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Mortality among IDUs living with AIDS might be decreased by reducing metropolitan income inequality, increasing public health expenditures, and perhaps increasing drug abuse treatment and HIV testing services. Given prior evidence that drug-related arrest rates are associated with higher HIV prevalence rates among IDUs and do not seem to decrease IDU population prevalence, changes in laws and policing practices to reduce such arrests while still protecting public order should be considered. Public Library of Science 2013-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3578804/ /pubmed/23437341 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057201 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Friedman, Samuel R.
West, Brooke S.
Pouget, Enrique R.
Hall, H. Irene
Cantrell, Jennifer
Tempalski, Barbara
Chatterjee, Sudip
Hu, Xiaohong
Cooper, Hannah L. F.
Galea, Sandro
Des Jarlais, Don C.
Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title_full Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title_fullStr Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title_full_unstemmed Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title_short Metropolitan Social Environments and Pre-HAART/HAART Era Changes in Mortality Rates (per 10,000 Adult Residents) among Injection Drug Users Living with AIDS
title_sort metropolitan social environments and pre-haart/haart era changes in mortality rates (per 10,000 adult residents) among injection drug users living with aids
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057201
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