Abstract

Studies on the aspects of HIV infection in small Brazilian municipalities are invaluable to appropriately design control strategies, better allocate resources, and improve health care services. The objective of the study was to assess the clinical and epidemiological aspects of HIV infection in a small municipality. A descriptive study was carried out in Miracema, a small municipality in the northwestern area of the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, between July 1999 and December 2003. All HIV-infected adult patients followed up at the local HIV/AIDS Program were included. Clinical and epidemiologic characteristics were prospectively assessed through standardized questionnaires. A total of 65 adult patients who attended the local HIV/AIDS Program were analyzed. Most (34) were women (male to female ratio: 0.9). An absolute predominance of patients who were born in Miracema or neighboring municipalities (94%), lived in Miracema (90.7%), were single (70.8%), attributed the acquisition of HIV infection to unprotected heterosexual intercourse (72.3%) and had a past history of snorting cocaine (27.7) was found Central nervous system disorders (including five cases of cryptococcal meningitis) and acute pulmonary pneumocystosis-like respiratory failure were major causes of morbidity. Most patients (56.9%) were at presented in advanced stages of HIV infection. The predominance of patients on advanced stages of HIV infection suggest the existence of a large pool of undiagnosed cases in the community. A major feature of the cohort was an inverted male to female ratio. Further investigations over a broader geographic area are urgently needed for better understanding the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of HIV infection in small Brazilian municipalities and rural areas.

Highlights

  • The large urban centers in the Southeast macroregion of Brazil stand among the areas most heavily burdened by the HIV epidemic in the Americas

  • By June 2004 a total of 362,364 AIDS cases had been reported in Brazil[7] and it was estimated that 597,000 15 to 49 year-old adults were living with HIV infection in the year 2000.17 Even though the Brazilian epidemic remains largely concentrated in major urban areas, enough evidence of rapidly changing epidemiological patterns is accumulating

  • Current data on the Brazilian AIDS epidemic shows a trend towards an increasing number of cases in small municipalities.[8,12,16]

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Summary

Introduction

METHODSThe large urban centers in the Southeast macroregion of Brazil stand among the areas most heavily burdened by the HIV epidemic in the Americas. By June 2004 a total of 362,364 AIDS cases had been reported in Brazil[7] and it was estimated that 597,000 15 to 49 year-old adults were living with HIV infection in the year 2000.17 Even though the Brazilian epidemic remains largely concentrated in major urban areas, enough evidence of rapidly changing epidemiological patterns is accumulating. To appropriately design and implement adequate control measures, a better understanding of the characteristics of HIV infection in relatively small Brazilian communities and rural areas is urgently needed. It was aimed at reporting the results of a clinical and epidemiological study performed in a small municipality

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