1 / 21

HIV INFECTION AND INJECTION DRUG USE: The Importance of Gender

HIV INFECTION AND INJECTION DRUG USE: The Importance of Gender. 1 Amy B. Wisniewski, Ph.D. 2 Adrian S. Dobs, M.D., MPH Departments of Pediatrics 1 and Medicine 2. OBJECTIVES.

serafina
Download Presentation

HIV INFECTION AND INJECTION DRUG USE: The Importance of Gender

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HIV INFECTION AND INJECTION DRUG USE:The Importance of Gender 1Amy B. Wisniewski, Ph.D. 2Adrian S. Dobs, M.D., MPH Departments of Pediatrics1 and Medicine2

  2. OBJECTIVES • To determine the impact of gender on depression, quality of life (QOL) and cognition in HIV infected, injection drug using populations

  3. IMPORTANCE • By considering gender in the natural history of HIV and IDU, personalized treatments can be developed to optimize outcome

  4. BACKGROUND • Most studies that describe mental health and cognition in HIV/AIDS and IDU have focused solely on men

  5. The National Academy of Sciences recommends that health research include men and women • Researchers should analyze their data forsex differences

  6. Depression, poor QOL and cognitive impairment are known consequences of HIV/AIDS • Women, in general, report more depressive symptoms than men

  7. Men and Women matched by Age Race Education SES IDU Outcome Measures Depression CESD QOL MOS-HIV Cognition Verbal memory Perceptual speed STUDY DESIGN

  8. PARTICIPANTS

  9. PARTICIPANTS

  10. RESULTS More women than men reported depression (CESD > 16)

  11. Women who were both HIV+ and IDU+ were the most likely to report depression (CESD > 16)

  12. Women were more likely to show poor (lower) QOL/physical health scores than men, when adjusted for HIV and IDU.

  13. HIV+ participants were more likely to show poor (lower) QOL/physical health scores than HIV- participants.

  14. HIV+ participants were more likely to show poor (lower) QOL/mental health scores than HIV- participants.

  15. COGNITIVE SCORES • In general, women outperform men on tests of verbal memory • In general, HIV- outperform HIV+ participants on measures of perceptual speed

  16. HIV STATUS AND GENDER INTERACT HIV- women perform best, and HIV+ men perform the worst on a test of delayed verbal memory (p < .05).

  17. SUMMARY • Females are at greater risk of depression than males • This sex difference in depression is most pronounced in females who are both HIV+ and IDU+

  18. Women and HIV+ participants were most likely to report poor QOL scores • HIV+ men were most likely to exhibit poor verbal memory

  19. CONCLUSIONS • HIV and IDU are associated with depression and poor QOL in women, but not men • HIV is associated with poor verbal memory in men, but not women

  20. SIGNIFICANCE • Medical treatments for HIV/AIDS and IDU should be tailored to meet the specific needs of affected men and women

  21. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • Vickie Sinkler • Rosa Sebree • Samantha Apel • NIH 1R01DA/DKR814-6141

More Related