Using the Index of Concentration at the Extremes to Evaluate Associations of Economic and Hispanic/Latino-White Racial Segregation with HIV Outcomes Among Adults Aged ≥ 18 Years with Diagnosed HIV - United States, 2021.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities
; 2024 Jul 17.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39017773
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE(S) To examine associations between Index of Concentration at the Extremes (ICE) measures (proxy for structural racism) for economic and Hispanic/Latino-White racial segregation and HIV outcomes among adults in the U.S. METHODS:
Census tract-level HIV diagnoses, linkage to HIV medical care within 1 month of diagnosis (linkage), and viral suppression within 6 months of diagnosis (viral suppression) data for 2021 from the National HIV Surveillance System were used. Three ICE measures were obtained from the American Community Survey ICEincome (income segregation), ICErace (Hispanic/Latino-White racial segregation), and ICEincome + race (Hispanic/Latino-White racialized economic segregation). Rate ratios (RRs) for HIV diagnosis and prevalence ratios (PRs) for linkage and viral suppression were used to examine differences in HIV outcomes across ICE quintiles with Quintile5 (Q5 most privileged) as reference group and adjusted by selected characteristics.RESULTS:
Among the 32,529 adults, diagnosis rates were highest in Quintile1 (Q1 most deprived) for ICEincome (28.7) and ICEincome + race (28.4) and Q2 for ICErace (27.0). We also observed higher RRs in HIV diagnosis and lower PRs in linkage and viral suppression (except for ICErace for linkage) in Q1 compared to Q5. Higher RRs and lower PRs in ICE measures were observed among males (diagnosis), adults aged 18â34 (diagnosis and linkage) and aged ≥ 45 (viral suppression), and among adults in the South (all 3 HIV outcomes).CONCLUSIONS:
Barriers in access to care/treatment in more Hispanic/Latino-White racialized economic segregated communities perpetuate the disproportionate impact of HIV on the population. Removing barriers to HIV care/treatment created by systemic racism/segregation may improve HIV outcomes and reduce disparities.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
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Revista:
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Estados Unidos