Revisão Revisado por pares

HIV/AIDS in the Rural United States: Epidemiology and Health Services Delivery

1995; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 52; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/107755879505200401

ISSN

1552-6801

Autores

Robin P. Graham, Maureen L. Forrester, Jere A. Wysong, Thomas C. Rosenthal, Paul A. James,

Tópico(s)

Homelessness and Social Issues

Resumo

This integrated research review addresses the epidemiology of rural human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) and the organization, financing, and delivery of health services for rural persons living with HIV or AIDS (PLWHIVs, PLWAs). Several abstracting services, indexing services, and bibliographies were searched. An annotation form served as the guideline for data extraction. Several conclusions emerged from this review. Epidemiological evidence indicates that there has been a dramatic increase in the relative proportion of rural HIV/AIDS incident cases over the past 5 years. Explanations for the rural increase focus on injection drug use, heterosexual behavior, and sexually transmitted disease levels. Dramatically elevated rates of infection in rural Black women are indicated. Rural areas experience important levels of in-migration of HIV/AIDS-infected individuals. The health services literature suggests that rural providers and institutions have limited resources and little experience with PLWHIVs or PLWAs.

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