Risk of new HIV diagnosis by intersecting migration, socioeconomic, and mental health vulnerabilities in the Netherlands: a nationwide analysis of the ATHENA cohort and Statistics Netherlands registry data
Vita W. Jongen, Anders Boyd, Patrizia Carrieri, Nina Schat, Selwyn H. Lowe, Rosan van Zoest, Marit G.A. van Vonderen, Jolanda Lammers, Mark Verhagen, Ard van Sighem, Marc van der Valk, F.J.B. Nellen, F.J.B. Nellen, M.A. van Agtmael, M. Bomers, G.J. de Bree, S.E. Geerlings

TL;DR
The study finds that people in the Netherlands with migration backgrounds and mental health or economic issues are at higher risk of new HIV diagnoses.
Contribution
The study identifies intersecting vulnerabilities (migration, socioeconomic status, mental health) that disproportionately increase HIV risk.
Findings
Individuals with migration backgrounds and low income had higher HIV diagnosis risks.
Mental health care and antidepressant use increased HIV risk among men.
Women on social welfare and using antipsychotics had elevated HIV risk.
Abstract
To further reduce new HIV diagnoses in the Netherlands, individual and structural barriers hindering prevention must be addressed. We aimed to estimate the disproportional burden of new HIV diagnoses and explore how intersecting socio-demographic, socio-economic, and health-related factors jointly influence the risk of a new HIV diagnosis. We combined data from the ATHENA cohort, an ongoing nationwide HIV cohort, with registry data from Statistics Netherlands. We selected individuals with a new HIV diagnosis between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2023 and matched them to individuals from the general population. We assessed determinants of a new HIV diagnosis using a multivariable generalized linear model. We used Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA) to quantify the joint and individual contribution of intersecting variables. 6055 men and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · HIV/AIDS Impact and Responses
