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Citation

Adimora, Adaora A.; Ramirez, Catalina; Poteat, Tonia; Archin, Nancie M.; Averitt, Dawn; Auerbach, Judith D.; Agwu, Allison L.; Currier, Judith; & Gandhi, Monica (2021). HIV and Women in the USA: What We Know and Where to Go from Here. Lancet, 397(10289), 1107-1115.

Abstract

New diagnoses of HIV infection have decreased among women in the USA overall, but marked racial and geographical disparities persist. The federal government has announced an initiative that aims to decrease the number of new infections in the nation by 90% within the next 10 years. With this in mind, we highlight important recent developments concerning HIV epidemiology, comorbidities, treatment, and prevention among women in the USA. We conclude that, to end the US HIV epidemic, substantially greater inclusion of US women in clinical research will be required, as will better prevention and treatment efforts, with universal access to health care and other supportive services that enable women to exercise agency in their own HIV prevention and care. Ending the epidemic will also require eliminating the race, class, and gender inequities, as well as the discrimination and structural violence, that have promoted and maintained the distribution of HIV in the USA, and that will, if unchecked, continue to fuel the epidemic in the future.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(21)00396-2

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2021

Journal Title

Lancet

Author(s)

Adimora, Adaora A.
Ramirez, Catalina
Poteat, Tonia
Archin, Nancie M.
Averitt, Dawn
Auerbach, Judith D.
Agwu, Allison L.
Currier, Judith
Gandhi, Monica

Article Type

Review

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Poteat - 0000-0001-6541-3787