Potential drivers of HIV acquisition in African-American women related to mass incarceration: an agent-based modelling study
Authored by Joella W Adams, Mark N Lurie, Maximilian R F King, Kathleen A Brady, Sandro Galea, Samuel R Friedman, Maria R Khan, Brandon D L Marshall
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6304-x
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Python
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
BackgroundThe United States has the highest incarceration rate in the
world. Incarceration can increase HIV risk behaviors for individuals
involved with the criminal justice system and may be a driver of HIV
acquisition within the community.MethodsWe used an agent-based model to
simulate HIV transmission in a sexual-contact network representing
heterosexual African American men and women in Philadelphia to identify
factors influencing the impact of male mass incarceration on HIV
acquisition in women. The model was calibrated using surveillance data
and assumed incarceration increased the number of sexual contacts and
decreased HIV care engagement for men post-release. Incarceration of a
partner increased the number of sexual contacts for women. We compared a
counterfactual scenario with no incarceration to scenarios varying key
parameters to determine what factors drove HIV acquisition in
women.ResultsSetting the duration of male high-risk sexual behavior to
two years post-release increased the number of HIV transmissions to
women by more than 20\%. Decreasing post-release HIV care engagement and
increasing HIV acquisition risk attributable to sexually transmitted
infections (STIs) also increased the number of HIV transmissions to
women. Changing the duration of risk behavior for women, the proportion
of women engaging in higher risk behavior, and the relative risk of
incarceration for HIV-infected men had minimal impact.ConclusionThe mass
incarceration of African American men can increase HIV acquisition in
African American women on a population-level through factors including
post-release high-risk behaviors, disruption of HIV care engagement
among formerly incarcerated men, and increased STI prevalence. These
findings suggest that the most influential points of intervention may be
programs seeking to reduce male risk behaviors and promote HIV care
engagement post-release, as well as STI testing and treatment programs
for recently incarcerated men, as well as women with incarcerated
partners.
Tags
HIV
sexual behavior
Public-health
People
Release
Antiretroviral therapy
Men
Systems analysis
Prisons
Inmate
African
americans
Criminal-justice involvement
Risk sexual partnerships
Infected prisoners
Hepatitis risk
Substance-use