A Fractal Model of HIV Transmission on Complex Sociogeographic Networks. Part 2: Spread from a Ghettoized ‘Core Group’ into a ‘General Population’
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 26 (5) , 767-778
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a260767
Abstract
Study of the initial stages of HIV transmission along a ‘sociogeographic network’—a large, complex, spatially focused social network with possibly fractal geometry—is extended to include interaction between a low-dimensional ghettoized ‘core group’ within which the disease spreads very rapidly and a higher dimensional, more loosely structured ‘general population’ in which spread is relatively slow. A mathematical modeling exercise suggests that contextually modulated interaction between them can be highly nonlinear and may greatly increase the initial rate of disease transmission within the general population. This work contributes to a growing body of literature which suggests that programs to control HIV infection within the majority heterosexual population of the United States will fail spectacularly without particular focus on the coupled physical and social stabilization and rehabilitation of the urban ghettoes of marginalized populations which are the present, and rapidly expanding, disease epicenters. Evidence suggests their continued disintegration can both increase disease rates within the epicenters and increase the coupling between core groups and general populations by creating large numbers of spatially or economically displaced refugees.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inner-City Disease and the Public Health of the Suburbs: The Sociogeographic Dispersion of Point-Source InfectionEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1993
- Social disintegration and the spread of AIDS—II: Meltdown of sociogeographic structure in urban minority neighborhoodsSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- Reassessing priorities: Identifying the determinants of HIV transmissionSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- A Fractal Model of HIV Transmission on Complex Sociogeographic Networks: Towards Analysis of Large Data SetsEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1993
- Civil war and the spread of AIDS in Central AfricaEpidemiology and Infection, 1991
- A synergism of plagues: “Planned shrinkage,” contagious housing destruction, and AIDS in the bronxEnvironmental Research, 1988
- Temporal and Social Aspects of Gonorrhea Transmission: the Force of InfectivitySexually Transmitted Diseases, 1988
- Penicillinase-Producing Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Dade County, FloridaSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1988
- Gonorrhea as a Social DiseaseSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1984
- Possible Breakdown of the Alexander-Orbach Rule at Low DimensionalitiesPhysical Review Letters, 1984