Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
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Why are the benefits of increased resources not impacting the risk of HIV infection for high SES women in Cameroon?The social determinants of HIV serostatus in sub-Saharan Africa: an inverse relationship between poverty and HIV?No evidence of association between HIV-1 and malaria in populations with low HIV-1 prevalence.Awareness of HIV status, prevention knowledge and condom use among people living with HIV in Mozambique.Population-based study of food insecurity and HIV transmission risk behaviors and symptoms of sexually transmitted infections among linked couples in NepalHIV risk perception and distribution of HIV risk among African, Caribbean and other Black people in a Canadian city: mixed methods results from the BLACCH studyHIV Infection among Young People in Northwest Tanzania: The Role of Biological, Behavioural and Socio-Demographic Risk FactorsSocioeconomic gradients in internalized stigma among 4,314 persons with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa.Age, poverty and alcohol use as HIV risk factors for women in Mongu, Zambia.Spatial analysis of HIV infection and associated individual characteristics in Burundi: indications for effective prevention.Are Geographical "Cold Spots" of Male Circumcision Driving Differential HIV Dynamics in Tanzania?The effects of household wealth on HIV prevalence in Manicaland, Zimbabwe - a prospective household census and population-based open cohort study.Preventing HIV among young people: research priorities for the futureSocioeconomic inequalities in HIV/AIDS prevalence in sub-Saharan African countries: evidence from the Demographic Health Surveys.Relationship between socioeconomic status and HIV infection in a rural tertiary health centerThe better the worse: risk factors for HIV infection among women in Kenya and Uganda: demographic and health survey.Residential Spaces and Timing of First Sexual Intercourse Among Never-Married Youths in Nigeria.The HIV-poverty thesis re-examined: poverty, wealth or inequality as a social determinant of HIV infection in sub-Saharan Africa?Challenging HIV vulnerability discourse: the case of professional and entrepreneurial women in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.Association between HIV infection and socio-economic status: evidence from a semirural area of southern Mozambique.Relationships between poverty and AIDS Illness in South Africa: an investigation of urban and rural households in KwaZulu-Natal.Inequality in prime-age adult deaths in a high AIDS mortality setting: does the measure of economic status matter?Socioeconomic position and ten-year survival and virologic outcomes in a Ugandan HIV cohort receiving antiretroviral therapy.Do the factors associated with female HIV infection vary by socioeconomic status in Cameroon?Circumcision status and time to first sex among never-married young men in Malawi: evidence from the demographic and health survey.Socioeconomic Status and Vulnerability to HIV Infection in Uganda: Evidence from Multilevel Modelling of AIDS Indicator Survey Data.Timing of Premarital Intercourse in Bandjoun (West Cameroon)Family Environment and Premarital Intercourse in Bandjoun (West Cameroon)
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Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on 27 September 2008
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
@en
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
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type
label
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
@en
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
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prefLabel
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
@en
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P921
P356
P1476
Socioeconomic status and HIV seroprevalence in Tanzania: a counterintuitive relationship.
@en
P2093
Felton Earls
S V Subramanian
Wezi M Msisha
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P304
P356
10.1093/IJE/DYN186
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2008-09-27T00:00:00Z