Risk for AIDS in multiethnic neighborhoods in San Francisco, California. The population-based AMEN Study.
- 1 July 1992
- journal article
- Vol. 157 (1) , 32-40
Abstract
To examine the actual and potential spread of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epicenter to surrounding neighborhoods, we studied the prevalence of the viral infection and AIDS risk behaviors from 1988 to 1989 in a representative sample of unmarried whites, African Americans, and Hispanics living in San Francisco. We surveyed 1,770 single men and women aged 20 to 44 years (a 64% response rate) in a random household sample drawn from 3 neighborhoods of varying geographic and cultural proximity to the Castro District where the San Francisco epidemic began. Of 1,369 with blood tests, 69 (5%) had HIV antibodies; all but 5 of these reported either homosexual activity (32% HIV-positive; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 23%, 41%), injection drug use (5% HIV-positive; CI = 1%, 14%), or both (59% HIV-positive; CI 42%, 74%). Homosexual activity was more common among white men than among African-American or Hispanic men, but the proportion of those infected was similar in the 3 races. Both the prevalence of homosexually active men and the proportion infected were much lower in the 2 more outlying neighborhoods. Risk behaviors in the past year for acquiring HIV heterosexually--sex with an HIV-infected person or homosexually active man or injection drug user, unprotected sexual intercourse with more than 4 partners, and (as a proxy) having a sexually transmitted disease--were assessed in 1,573 neighborhood residents who were themselves neither homosexually active men nor injection drug users. The prevalence of reporting at least 1 of these risk behaviors was 12% overall, and race-gender estimates ranged from 5% among Hispanic women to 21% among white women. We conclude that in San Francisco, infection with HIV is rare among people who are neither homosexually active nor injection drug users, but the potential for the use spread of infection is substantial, as 12% of this group reported important risk behaviors for acquiring the virus heterosexually.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Traveling waves of HIV infection on a low dimensional ‘socio-geographic’ networkSocial Science & Medicine, 1991
- Sex, Lies, and HIVNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Methodological problems in AIDS behavioral research: Influences on measurement error and participation bias in studies of sexual behavior.Psychological Bulletin, 1990
- The Case for Wider Use of Testing for HIV InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- A synergism of plagues: “Planned shrinkage,” contagious housing destruction, and AIDS in the bronxEnvironmental Research, 1988
- Epidemiology of HIV Infection and AIDS in the United StatesScience, 1988
- Transmission of HIV in Belle Glade, Florida: Lessons for Other Communities in the United StatesScience, 1988
- The global patterns and prevalence of AIDS and HIV infectionAIDS, 1988
- Transmission of the Human Immunodeficiency VirusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infections among Civilian Applicants for United States Military Service, October 1985 to March 1986New England Journal of Medicine, 1987