Abstract

Controlling the spread of HIV among hidden, high-risk populations such as survival sex workers and their clients is becoming increasingly important in the ongoing fight against HIV/AIDS. Several sociological and structural factors render general control strategies ineffective in these settings; instead, focused prevention, testing and treatment strategies which take into account the nature of survival sex work are required. Using a dynamic bipartite network model of sexual contacts, we investigate the optimal distribution of treatment and preventative resources among sex workers and their clients; specifically, we consider control strategies that randomly allocate antiretroviral therapy and pre-exposure prophylaxis within each subpopulation separately. Motivated by historical data from a South African mining community, three main asymmetries between sex workers and clients are considered in our model: relative population sizes, migration rates and partner distributions. We find that preventative interventions targeted at female sex workers are the lowest cost strategies for reducing HIV prevalence, since the sex workers form a smaller population and have, on average, more sexual contacts. However, the high migration rate among survival sex workers limits the extent to which prevalence can be reduced using this strategy. To achieve a further reduction in HIV prevalence, testing and treatment in the client population cannot be ignored.

Full Text
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