Empirical evidence for the severe but localized impact of AIDS on population structure

Author:  ["Daniel Low-Beer","Rand L. Stoneburner","Andrew Mukulu"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

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Abstract

Despite considerable speculation on the demographic impact of AIDS, there has been, until now, little scientific evidence to establish its existence or scale. Because of the widespread implications of these predictions, methods to combine demography and epidemiology to study empirical situations have been an urgent priority. This study derives the extent and mechanisms of demographic impacts of AIDS from routine data (the 1991 census) in a severely affected country, Uganda. Three characteristics are of particular note: first, the emergence of demographic impacts much earlier than previously estimated; second, their localization with negative population growth at parish but not at district or national scales; third, a greater impact on the number of children than previously predicted1,2, due as much to changes in population fertility as mortality. The emergence of demographic impacts at this stage highlights original aspects of the interdependence of HIV infection and demographic growth not previously recorded and the need to target preventive interventions to youth in developing countries.

Cite this article

Low-Beer, D., Stoneburner, R. & Mukulu, A. Empirical evidence for the severe but localized impact of AIDS on population structure. Nat Med 3, 553–557 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0597-553

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