The intersection of women’s health and poverty

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Abstract

We sought to understand the multilevel syndemic factors that are concurrently contributing to the HIV epidemic among women living in the USA. We specifically examined community, network, dyadic, and individual factors to explain HIV vulnerability within a socioecological framework. We analyzed data from four diverse locations: Atlanta, New York City (the Bronx), Raleigh/Durham, and Washington, D.C. The following themes were identified at four levels including (1) exosystem (community): poverty prevalence, discrimination, gender imbalances, community violence, and housing challenges; (2) mesosystem (network): organizational social support and sexual concurrency; (3) microsystem (dyadic): sex exchange, interpersonal social support, and intimate partner violence; and (4) individual: HIV/STI awareness, risk taking, and substance use. A strong theme emerged with over 80 % of responses linked to the fundamental role of financial insecurity underlying risk-taking behavioral pathways. Multilevel syndemic factors contribute to women’s vulnerability to HIV in the USA. Financial insecurity is a predominant theme, suggesting the need for tailored programming for women to reduce HIV risk.

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APA

Frew, P. M., Parker, K. A., Vo, L., Haley, D. F., McGovern, T., Owens, L. E., … Randall, L. (2016). The intersection of women’s health and poverty. In Poverty in the United States: Women’s Voices (pp. 25–40). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43833-7_3

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