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DOI: 10.1136/sti.2005.016014
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Declines in HIV prevalence can be associated with changing sexual behaviour in Uganda, urban Kenya, Zimbabwe, and urban Haiti

Timothy B. Hallett,John Aberle‐Grasse,George Bello,Louis-Marie Boulos,Michel Cayemittes,Boaz Cheluget,John Chipeta,Rob Dorrington,Sabada Dube,Alexandre Ekra,Jesus M Garcia-Calleja,Geoffrey P. Garnett,Stacie M. Greby,Simon Gregson,John Grove,SL Hader,Joshua Hanson,Wolfgang Hladik,Shabbir Ismail,Kassim Sidibé,Wilford Kirungi,Léonard Kouassi,Agnes Mahomva,Lawrence Marum,Chantal Maurice,Monica Nolan,T. Rehle,John Stover,Neff Walker

Representativeness heuristic
Population
Developing country
2006
<b>Objective:</b> To determine whether observed changes in HIV prevalence in countries with generalised HIV epidemics are associated with changes in sexual risk behaviour. <b>Methods:</b> A mathematical model was developed to explore the relation between prevalence recorded at antenatal clinics (ANCs) and the pattern of incidence of infection throughout the population. To create a null model a range of assumptions about sexual behaviour, natural history of infection, and sampling biases in ANC populations were explored to determine which factors maximised declines in prevalence in the absence of behaviour change. Modelled prevalence, where possible based on locally collected behavioural data, was compared with the observed prevalence data in urban Haiti, urban Kenya, urban Cote d’Ivoire, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Uganda, and urban Ethiopia. <b>Results:</b> Recent downturns in prevalence observed in urban Kenya, Zimbabwe, and urban Haiti, like Uganda before them, could only be replicated in the model through reductions in risk associated with changes in behaviour. In contrast, prevalence trends in urban Cote d’Ivoire, Malawi, urban Ethiopia, and Rwanda show no signs of changed sexual behaviour. <b>Conclusions:</b> Changes in patterns of HIV prevalence in urban Kenya, Zimbabwe, and urban Haiti are quite recent and caution is required because of doubts over the accuracy and representativeness of these estimates. Nonetheless, the observed changes are consistent with behaviour change and not the natural course of the HIV epidemic.
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    Declines in HIV prevalence can be associated with changing sexual behaviour in Uganda, urban Kenya, Zimbabwe, and urban Haiti” is a paper by Timothy B. Hallett John Aberle‐Grasse George Bello Louis-Marie Boulos Michel Cayemittes Boaz Cheluget John Chipeta Rob Dorrington Sabada Dube Alexandre Ekra Jesus M Garcia-Calleja Geoffrey P. Garnett Stacie M. Greby Simon Gregson John Grove SL Hader Joshua Hanson Wolfgang Hladik Shabbir Ismail Kassim Sidibé Wilford Kirungi Léonard Kouassi Agnes Mahomva Lawrence Marum Chantal Maurice Monica Nolan T. Rehle John Stover Neff Walker published in 2006. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.