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You are here: Home / Retired Persons / Natalie Slopen, Sc.D. / Natalie Slopen Publications / Testing a Syndemic Index of Psychosocial and Structural Factors associated with HIV Testing among Black Men

Rodman Turpin, Natalie Slopen, Bradley Boekeloo, Cher Dallal, Shuo Chen, and Typhanye Dyer (2020)

Testing a Syndemic Index of Psychosocial and Structural Factors associated with HIV Testing among Black Men

Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 31(1):455-470.

Black populations in the United States are disproportionately affected by HIV. This disparity may be affected by social and structural barriers to HIV testing, leading to undiagnosed infection and prolonged HIV transmissibility. Using data from a nationally representative sample of 1,727 Black men in the 2015 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System we tested for differences in poverty, depression, and health care barriers between Black men who had been HIV tested in the past year and those who had not. We also tested a syndemic index of these factors. Number of syndemic factors was linearly associated with less HIV testing (aPR=0.79, 95% CI 0.66-0.95). Assumptions of unidimensionality were met. The use of a syndemic index was a superior approach to analyzing these factors individually, both in terms of model fit and associations detected. The accumulation of poverty, depression, and health care barriers has an adverse impact on HIV testing among Black men.

HIV / AIDS, Boekeloo, Health, Healthcare, Health in Social Context, Slopen
First published online: February 7th, 2020

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