Susan Reif’s Op-Ed in The News & Observer

Susan Reif’s newly published report Deep South Has the Highest HIV-elated Death Rates in the United South is gaining more press. Susan Reif, a Research Associate at CHPIR, and Carolyn McAllaster, a clinical professor at Duke University School of Law, wrote an op-ed for The News & Observer in honor of World AIDS Day, December 1, 2015.

The report states “the South continues to bear the heaviest HIV burden, with the highest rates of new HIV diagnoses and people living with diagnosed HIV.”  Furthermore, an important finding for policymakers is “death rates with HIV as the underlying cause were highest in the South.”

The report calls for U.S. federal policy makers to “direct adequate prevention resources to the U.S. South, including areas outside the large cities, where HIV diagnosis numbers and HIV-related deaths are high.”

 

The op-ed in The News & Observer can be found here.

This report was also featured on the Duke Global Health Institute’s website and that article can be found here.

The full report can be found on the Southern HIV/AIDS Strategy Initiative by clicking on the picture below.

DeepSouth

Brian Pence, Kathryn Whetten, Rachel Whetten, and team recently published a research article titled Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon in PLOS One journal.

The study researched how implementing measurement-based antidepressant care (MCH) affected HIV outcomes over 4 months of antidepressant treatment.

The conclusion of the study found that a number of HIV behavioral and non-behavioral health outcomes improved over 4 months of effective depression treatment.

Please click the image below to read the full article.

PLOSOne.ChangesinHIV

Sara LeGrand, Kathryn Whetten, and team recently published an article in Behavioral-Bio-Medical Interface: Current HIV/AIDS Reports.

The study researched if traumatic experiences are associated with negative health and behavioral outcomes. The findings conclude that people living with HIV who have experienced traumatic events experience lower rates of HIV disclosure and increases in risk behaviors.

Please click the image below to read the full article.

Trauma

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