7 research outputs found

    A long-wave event: HIV/AIDS, politics, governance and 'security': sundering the intergenerational bond?

    Get PDF
    There is a disharmonious resonance between the lifecycle of the human. Immunodeficiency virus and that of its human host. In heavily affected countries, many people live long enough to reproduce and then die, leaving behind numerous orphans. This process has implications that we do not understand. While some foresee social disorder arising from legions of poorly socialized and unruly children grown to adulthood, the evidence is far from clear. Thesearguments and the evidence are reviewed in this article, particularly in relation to the links between premature death and electoral processes in southern Africa. © The Royal Institute of International Affairs 2006

    Effect of misclassification of antiretroviral treatment status on the prevalence of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Estimates of the prevalence of transmitted HIV drug resistance (TDR) in a population are derived from resistance tests performed on samples from patients thought to be naĂŻve to antiretroviral treatment (ART). Much of the debate over reliability of estimates of the prevalence of TDR has focused on whether the sample population is representative. However estimates of the prevalence of TDR will also be distorted if some ART-experienced patients are misclassified as ART-naĂŻve.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The impact of misclassification bias on the rate of TDR was examined. We developed methods to obtain adjusted estimates of the prevalence of TDR for different misclassification rates, and conducted sensitivity analyses of trends in the prevalence of TDR over time using data from the UK HIV Drug Resistance Database. Logistic regression was used to examine trends in the prevalence of TDR over time.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The observed rate of TDR was higher than true TDR when misclassification was present and increased as the proportion of misclassification increased. As the number of naĂŻve patients with a resistance test relative to the number of experienced patients with a test increased, the difference between true and observed TDR decreased. The observed prevalence of TDR in the UK reached a peak of 11.3% in 2002 (odds of TDR increased by 1.10 (95% CI 1.02, 1.19, p(linear trend) = 0.02) per year 1997-2002) before decreasing to 7.0% in 2007 (odds of TDR decreased by 0.90 (95% CI 0.87, 0.94, p(linear trend) < 0.001) per year 2002-2007. Trends in adjusted TDR were altered as the misclassification rate increased; the significant downward trend between 2002-2007 was lost when the misclassification increased to over 4%.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The effect of misclassification of ART on estimates of the prevalence of TDR may be appreciable, and depends on the number of naĂŻve tests relative to the number of experienced tests. Researchers can examine the effect of ART misclassification on their estimates of the prevalence of TDR if such a bias is suspected.</p

    Drug monographs

    No full text
    corecore