Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Study shows direct link between state spending habits and AIDS deaths

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-02/yu-ssd020316.php

Public Release: 3-Feb-2016
Study shows direct link between state spending habits and AIDS deaths
Yale University

Despite considerable advances in the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS over the past 30 years, HIV infection rates have remained stagnant in the United States for the past decade. A study by researchers at the Yale Global Health Leadership Institute (GHLI) examines links between spending on social services and public health and AIDS deaths in the United States. The study was published online in the journal AIDS.

The researchers reviewed data between 2000 and 2009 from all 50 states regarding HIV/AIDS case rates and AIDS deaths. They found that states with higher spending on social services and public health -- such as education and income support -- per person living in poverty (according to the federal poverty threshold) had significantly lower HIV/AIDS case rates and fewer AIDS deaths.

"Our findings highlight the potentially critical importance of spending on social services as an element of HIV prevention and treatment to reduce HIV/AIDS diagnoses and AIDS deaths," said Kristina Talbert-Slagle, lead study author and senior scientific officer at Yale GHLI. "It is interesting to see how much HIV, a virus, is affected by social determinants. We know heart disease and diabetes can be influenced, but we don't often recognize how much rates of infectious disease can be influenced by social factors."

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