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HIV issues and people with disabilities: A review and agenda for research

Abstract

The recent AIDS and Disability Partners Forum at the UN General Assembly High Level Meetings on AIDS in New York in June 2011 and the International AIDS Conference in Washington, DC in July 2012 underscores the growing attention to the impact of HIV and AIDS on persons with disabilities. However, research on AIDS and disability, particularly a solid evidence base upon which to build policy and programming remains thin, scattered and difficult to access. In this review paper, we summarise what is currently known about the intersection between HIV and AIDS and disability, paying particular attention to the small but emerging body of epidemiology data on the prevalence of HIV for people with disabilities, as well as the increasing understanding of HIV risk factors for people with disabilities. We find that the number of papers in the peer-reviewed literature remains distressingly small. Over the past 20 years an average of 5 articles on some aspect of disability and HIV and AIDS were published annually in the peer-reviewed literature from 1990 to 2000, increasing slightly to an average of 6 per year from 2000 to 2010. Given the vast amount of research around HIV and AIDS and the thousands of articles on the subject published in the peer-reviewed literature annually, the continuing lack of attention to HIV and AIDS among this at risk population, now estimated to make up 15% of the world's population, is striking. However, the statistics, while too limited at this point to make definitive conclusions, increasingly suggest at least an equal HIV prevalence rate for people with disabilities as for their non-disabled peers.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Nora Groce
  • Poul Rohleder
  • Arne Henning Eide
  • Malcolm MacLachlan
  • Sumaya Mall
  • Leslie Swartz

Affiliation

  • University College London
  • Anglia Ruskin University
  • SINTEF Digital / Health Research
  • The University of Dublin, Trinity College
  • University of Stellenbosch

Year

2012

Published in

Social Science and Medicine

ISSN

0277-9536

Publisher

Elsevier

Volume

77

Page(s)

31 - 40

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