L2 - global health AIDS Flashcards

1
Q

Define Incidence

A

The number of new cases of a disease measured within a defined population within a specific time period

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2
Q

Define prevalence

A

The total number of cases of a disease in a defined population at a particular moment of time.

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3
Q

Define mortality rate

A

The incidence of death within a defined population within a specific time period

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4
Q

Reflect on the dramatic impact of emerging infectious diseases

A

With the emergence of HIV/AIDs, there were initially (1981) around 5 cases in young males from Pneumocystis pneumonia that couldn’t be explained, but which seemed to show an association due to demographic similarity. There were also some deaths. This then grew exponentially in the following months to 285 cases (March 1982) to 1.3 million people living with HIV in the US (2006).

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5
Q

What are the 5H’s

A

Homosexuals, Haitians, Haemophiliacs…

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6
Q

What were the risk factors of AID?

A

Injection drug use, male-to-male sexual contact, more sexual contacts, syphilis

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7
Q

How were hypotheses (drugs/infection) of AIDs risk factors tested?

A

75% of living cases were interviewed, no association with popper (inhaled nitrate drugs)

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8
Q

Define case-clustering

A

When all living cases are of a certain population sub-group and cases are all related to one another i.e. have many sexual partners in common

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9
Q

What is a case-control study

A

A study that sets out a known outcome and compares individuals with that outcome to those without. The study determines what connects the members of each group i.e. odds ratios.

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10
Q

How do you design a case-control study?

A

Retrospective.
Identify an outcome. Form a group of subjects with and without the outcome. Look back in time to identify exposures, compare the frequency of exposures in the case and control groups.

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11
Q

Among gay men engaging in homosexual activity, what other population sub-groups were affected by HIV?

A
  • Injecting drug users

- Transfusion/Factor VIII recipients

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12
Q

What cases indicated that HIV was caused by an infection?

A

Monogamous sexual partners; babies transfused at birth; haemophiliacs

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13
Q

How did the amount of HIV positive test results change?

A

1978 <1%

1980 20%

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14
Q

Describe the distribution of HIV

A

90% in developing countries

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15
Q

What is the equation for frequency of a disease in the population?

A

number of cases in the population/number of people in the population

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16
Q

What was the number of people living with HIV in 2014?

A

36.9 million

17
Q

What names of countries are most affected by HIV?

A

S. Africa, C. Africa, Russia, S. America

18
Q

Describe prevalence of HIV from 1997-2006

A

Rapidly increasing up to around 1 100 000 (2006 level). Plateau in 1990s. Incidence roughly the same, although lower since 1991-2006.

19
Q

Describe the global changes in HIV prevalence from 2007-2014

A

Total change from 2.7 to 2 million. Sub-Saharan Africa 1.9 million to 1.4 million. South and South-East Asia slight difference.

20
Q

Describe 2016 HIV stats for UK

A

HIV diagnoses: 5000
AIDS + HIV diagnoses: 300
all-cause deaths in people with HIV: 500

21
Q

Describe global birth proportions of newly diagnosed HIV cases in the UK

A
UK: 45%
Rest of Europe: 17%
Africa: 20%
Asia: 7%
The Americas: 10%
Australasia: 2%
22
Q

When was mother-to-child transmission of HIV and syphilis stopped in Cuba?

A

2015

23
Q

How does incidence influence policy?

A

When the incidence nears 0, schools can be re-opened and outbreak can be declared over

24
Q

State the equation for mortality rate

A

Deaths from disease in a given time period/population at the start of the time period

25
Q

Since the beginning of the epidemic approx. how many people have been infected by HIV/AIDS?

A

60 million people

26
Q

How many people have died of HIV related causes?

A

25 million people

27
Q

How many infections are there per year?

A

2 million per year

28
Q

Compare deaths HIV in 2005 to 2014

A

2005: 2.8 million
2014: 1.2 million
SSA 2005: 2 million 2007: 790 000
S. Asia 2005: 560 000 2007: 240 000

29
Q

Explain the relationship between prevalence and mortality

A

For diseases where treatment confers survival benefit i.e. HIV (ART), the mortality falls. This results in increasing prevalence. As more people are alive and are able to transmit HIV, this also could result in higher incidence. If mortality = incidence the epidemic is stable.

30
Q

How many deaths have been averted since ART?

A

9 million

31
Q

How can prevalence of HIV increase but incidence decrease with treatment?

A

ART improves survival, the prevalence of HIV population increases. ART also reduces risk of onward viral transmission by limiting level of virus in the blood and secretions of people to 0. More people that take ART, less HIV transmission.

32
Q

Explain key IAS 2010 treatment 2 goals

A

Recognition and use of HIV treatment to prevent new infection, development of better combi ART and cheaper diagnostic tools, lowering of HIV-related costs, expansion of the availability of HIV testing and stronger links between HIV testing and care, encouragement and support in expanding and improving local HIV responses.

33
Q

State an effect of HAART and AZT

A

Lowered mother to child HIV transmission

34
Q

What is the main driver of transmission

A

Viral load

35
Q

Describe HPTN 052 study design

A

Randomised control trial looking at HPTN 052. This suppressed HIV in people with certain CD4+ count, leading to 96% reduction in risk of transmission to sexual partners.

36
Q

State HIV goals by 2020

A

90% of people with HIV will know their status (33.2 milli)
90% of all HIV diagnosed people will receive ART (29.5 milli)
90% of ART receivers will have durable suppression (26.9 milli)
73% of all people living with HIV will be virally suppressed

Current gap of around 10 milli from each target

37
Q

Compare mortality in high and low-income countries

A
57 million people die each year
High income: >66% live beyond age of 70
Main COD: man-made disease
Low income: <20% reach 70
Main COD: Lower respiratory tract, diarrhoeal disease, HIV/AIDs, IHD, Malaria, Stroke CVD, TB,  maternal
38
Q

What are the current and predicted costs if ART?

A

$42 billion 2010
$54 billion 2015
$26.6 billion 2020

39
Q

What is UNAIDS commitment

A

To end HIV epidemic as a public health threat by 2030