The influence of sex, race/ethnicity, and educational attainment on human immunodeficiency virus death rates among adults, 1993-2007.

Edgar P Simard, Mesfin Fransua, Deepa Naishadham, Ahmedin Jemal
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引用次数: 49

Abstract

Background: Overall declines in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) mortality may mask patterns for subgroups, and prior studies of disparities in mortality have used area-level vs individual-level socioeconomic status measures. The aim of this study was to examine temporal trends in HIV mortality by sex, race/ethnicity, and individual level of education (as a proxy for socioeconomic status).

Methods: We examined HIV deaths among non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Hispanic men and women aged 25 to 64 years in 26 states (1993-2007; N=91 307) reported to the National Vital Statistics System. The main outcome measures were age-standardized HIV death rates, rate differences, and rate ratios by educational attainment and between the least- and the most-educated (≤12 vs ≥16 years) individuals.

Results: Between 1993-1995 and 2005-2007, mortality declined for most men and women by race/ethnicity and educational levels, with the greatest absolute decreases for nonwhites owing to their higher baseline rates. Among men with the most education, rates per 100 000 population decreased from 117.89 (95% CI, 101.08-134.70) to 15.35 (12.08-18.62) in blacks vs from 26.42 (24.93-27.92) to 1.79 (1.50-2.08) in whites. Rates were unchanged for the least-educated black women (26.76; 95% CI, 24.30-29.23; during 2005-2007) and remained high for similarly educated black men (52.71; 48.96-56.45). Relative declines were greater with increasing levels of education (P < .001), resulting in widening disparities. Among men, the disparity rate ratio (comparing the least and the most educated) increased from 1.04 (95% CI, 0.89-1.21) during 1993-1995 to 3.43 (2.74-4.30) during 2005-2007 for blacks and from 0.98 (0.91-1.05) to 2.82 (2.34-3.40) for whites.

Conclusion: Although absolute declines in HIV mortality were greatest for nonwhites, rates remain high among blacks, especially in the lowest educated groups, underscoring the need for additional interventions.

性别、种族/民族和受教育程度对1993-2007年成人人体免疫缺陷病毒死亡率的影响。
背景:人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)死亡率的总体下降可能掩盖了亚组的模式,先前对死亡率差异的研究使用了地区水平与个人水平的社会经济地位测量。本研究的目的是检验按性别、种族/民族和个人教育水平(作为社会经济地位的代表)划分的艾滋病毒死亡率的时间趋势。方法:我们检查了26个州(1993-2007;N=91 307)向国家生命统计系统报告。主要结局指标是年龄标准化的艾滋病毒死亡率、发病率差异、受教育程度和受教育程度最低与最高(≤12岁vs≥16岁)个体之间的发病率比。结果:1993-1995年和2005-2007年期间,按种族/民族和教育水平划分,大多数男性和女性的死亡率下降,非白人的绝对下降幅度最大,因为他们的基线率较高。在受教育程度最高的男性中,黑人每10万人的发病率从117.89 (95% CI, 101.08-134.70)下降到15.35(12.08-18.62),而白人从26.42(24.93-27.92)下降到1.79(1.50-2.08)。受教育程度最低的黑人女性(26.76;95% ci, 24.30-29.23;在2005-2007年期间),同样受过教育的黑人男性仍然很高(52.71;48.96 - -56.45)。随着教育水平的提高,相对下降幅度更大(P < 0.001),导致差距扩大。在男性中,黑人的差距率比(比较受教育程度最低和最高的)从1993-1995年的1.04 (95% CI, 0.89-1.21)增加到2005-2007年的3.43(2.74-4.30),白人从0.98(0.91-1.05)增加到2.82(2.34-3.40)。结论:尽管艾滋病毒死亡率的绝对下降在非白人中最大,但黑人,特别是受教育程度最低的群体中的死亡率仍然很高,强调需要额外的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Archives of internal medicine
Archives of internal medicine 医学-医学:内科
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