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首页> 外文期刊>Medicine. >Understanding Cross-Sectional Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Disparities in Antiretroviral Use and Viral Suppression Among HIV Patients in the United States
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Understanding Cross-Sectional Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Disparities in Antiretroviral Use and Viral Suppression Among HIV Patients in the United States

机译:了解美国艾滋病毒患者在抗逆转录病毒使用和病毒抑制方面的跨种族,种族和性别差异

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To examine racial/ethnic and gender disparities in antiretroviral (ART) use and viral suppression among HIV-infected persons in care and identify factors that might account for observed disparities. The Medical Monitoring Project (MMP) is a complex sample survey of HIV-infected adults receiving medical care in the United States. We used weighted interview and medical record data collected 06/2009 to 05/2012 to estimate the prevalence of ART use and viral suppression among gender-stratified racial/ethnic groups. We used χ2 tests to identify significant differences in outcomes between white men versus other groups, and logistic regression models to identify the most parsimonious set of factors that could account for each observed difference. We found no significant disparity in ART use between white and Hispanic men, and no disparities between white men and white and Hispanic women after adjustment for disease stage, age, and poverty. Disparities in ART use between white men and black persons persisted after adjusting for other factors, but the observed differences were relatively small. Differences in ART use and adherence, demographic characteristics, and social determinants of health such as poverty, education, and insurance accounted for the observed disparities in viral suppression between white men and all groups except black men. In our model, accounting for these factors reduced the prevalence difference in viral suppression between white and black men by almost half. We found that factors associated with disparities differed among men and women of the same race/ethnicity, lending support to the assertion that gender affects access to care and health status among HIV-infected patients. In addition to supporting efforts to increase ART use and adherence among persons living with HIV, our analysis provides evidence for the importance of social determinants of health in understanding racial/ethnic and gender differences in ART use and viral suppression.
机译:检查在护理中感染艾滋病毒的人中抗逆转录病毒(ART)使用和病毒抑制方面的种族/种族和性别差异,并确定可能导致观察到差异的因素。医学监测项目(MMP)是一项针对在美国接受HIV感染的成年人进行的复杂样本调查。我们使用了加权访谈和从06/2009至05/2012收集的病历数据来估计按性别分层的种族/族裔人群中抗病毒治疗的使用率和病毒抑制率。我们使用χ 2 测试来确定白人与其他人群在结局方面的显着差异,并使用逻辑回归模型来确定可以解释每个观察到的差异的最简约的一组因素。我们发现,在调整疾病阶段,年龄和贫困之后,白人和西班牙裔男性之间在ART使用方面没有显着差异,白人和白人与西班牙裔女性之间也没有差异。调整其他因素后,白人和黑人之间在ART使用方面的差异仍然存在,但是观察到的差异相对较小。白人和除黑人以外的所有群体之间在病毒抑制方面观察到的差异是ART使用和依从性,人口统计学特征以及健康的社会决定因素(如贫困,教育和保险)方面的差异。在我们的模型中,考虑到这些因素,白人和黑人之间病毒抑制的患病率差异降低了近一半。我们发现,在相同种族/族裔的男女之间,与差异有关的因素有所不同,这支持了这样的论点,即性别会影响感染HIV的患者获得护理和健康状况的机会。除了支持增加艾滋病毒感染者之间抗病毒治疗的使用和依从性的努力之外,我们的分析还提供了健康的社会决定因素对于理解抗病毒治疗和使用病毒治疗的种族/种族和性别差异的重要性的证据。

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