Let it be sexual: how health care transmission of AIDS in Africa was ignored

Author:

Gisselquist David1,Potterat John J2,Brody Stuart3,Vachon Francois4

Affiliation:

1. Hershey, PA

2. Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA

3. Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Germany

4. University of Paris 7, France

Abstract

The consensus among influential AIDS experts that heterosexual transmission accounts for 90% of HIV infections in African adults emerged no later than 1988. We examine evidence available through 1988, including risk measures associating HIV with sexual behaviour, health care, and socioeconomic variables, HIV in children, and risks for HIV in prostitutes and STD patients. Evidence permits the interpretation that health care exposures caused more HIV than sexual transmission. In general population studies, crude risk measures associate more than half of HIV infections in adults with health care exposures. Early studies did not resolve questions about direction of causation (between injections and HIV) and confound (between injections and STD). Preconceptions about African sexuality and a desire to maintain public trust in health care may have encouraged discounting of evidence. We urge renewed, evidence-based, investigations into the proportion of African HIV from non-sexual exposures.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Dermatology

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1. Recognizing and Stopping Blood-Borne HIV Transmission in Africa;SSRN Electronic Journal;2022

2. The Greatest Factors Affecting Life Expectancy: A Research based on Different Continents and Countries;2021 3rd International Conference on Machine Learning, Big Data and Business Intelligence (MLBDBI);2021-12

3. Advice to Young Women in Africa: Sex May Not Be Your Biggest Risk for HIV;SSRN Electronic Journal;2019

4. The AIDS Pandemic: Searching for a Global Response;Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care;2018-09

5. Adverse Childhood Experiences and HIV Sexual Risk-Taking Behaviors Among Young Adults in Malawi;Journal of Interpersonal Violence;2018-05-08

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