2014
DOI: 10.1111/1552-6909.12480
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A Multilevel Understanding of HIV/AIDS Disease Burden among African American Women

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Cited by 15 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…This will be particularly important in highly affected communities. Given that HIV risk increases with an individual’s probability of being exposed to an HIV-positive sexual partner (Friedman, Cooper, & Osborne, 2009); individuals in higher prevalence communities will have greater geobehavioral vulnerability to HIV and, thus, require concerted prevention efforts (Brawner, 2014). GIS mapping of census tract-level data can be used to identify areas in need of intervention (e.g., high HIV incidence and concentrated disadvantage), while ethnographic methodologies can be used to engage community residents and design sustainable strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This will be particularly important in highly affected communities. Given that HIV risk increases with an individual’s probability of being exposed to an HIV-positive sexual partner (Friedman, Cooper, & Osborne, 2009); individuals in higher prevalence communities will have greater geobehavioral vulnerability to HIV and, thus, require concerted prevention efforts (Brawner, 2014). GIS mapping of census tract-level data can be used to identify areas in need of intervention (e.g., high HIV incidence and concentrated disadvantage), while ethnographic methodologies can be used to engage community residents and design sustainable strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An ecological conceptual model (Bronfenbrenner, 1986) guided the study (see Brawner, 2014 for an illustration of the model and additional details). Four major pathways are posited:

It is presumed that multilevel factors, such as mental health, social capital, and poverty, interact to influence community-level indicators of HIV transmission (e.g., HIV incidence rates).

These same multilevel interactions are purported to also influence behaviors that transmit HIV (e.g., multiple sexual partners).

The association between behaviors that transmit HIV and subsequent HIV risk is thought to be mediated by community-level indicators of HIV transmission in different geographical locations (e.g., community viral load).

The end result of HIV risk, referred to as “geobehavioral vulnerability to HIV”—the probability of HIV acquisition based on what you do, where you do it, and who you do it with—is the manifestation of multilevel interactions that create and sustain the risk context in certain populations and geosocial spaces (Brawner, 2014).

…”
Section: Guiding Conceptual Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These racial disparities in HIV-related health access and outcomes have persisted due to poverty, stigma, discrimination, residential segregation, and lack of access to care (Buot et al 2014; Earnshaw et al 2013). Midlife and older Black women, in particular, face a host of co-occurring social and psychological vulnerabilities that increase their risk of acquiring HIV and reduce their ability to be engaged in HIV care continuum (Brawner 2014; Davis and Tucker-Brown 2013; Sharpe et al 2012). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, the sexual risk behaviors of African American young men and women, and the prevalence of other STIs among African American women, contribute to African American women’s elevated risk, as well (Adimora, Schoenbach, & Floris-Moore, 2009; Paxton, Williams, Bolden, Guzman, & Harawa, 2013; Perkins, Voisin, & Stennis, 2013; Pflieger, Cook, Niccolai, & Connell, 2013; Raiford, Seth, & DiClemente, 2013; Stockman et al., 2013; Wingood & DiClemente, 2000). As Brawner states in an article exploring the multiple levels of HIV/AIDS disease burden among African American women, “…some African American women have minimal room for error because of the sheer concentration of HIV in their geographical and social environments” (Brawner, 2014, p. 634). Thus, African American adolescent women may be at elevated risk for acquiring HIV even when they do not personally exhibit high risk sexual behaviors (Adimora et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%