Epidemiology of HIV/AIDS among students in Shandong Province from 2010 to 2019
10.16835/j.cnki.1000-9817.2021.10.030
- VernacularTitle:山东省2010—2019年学生艾滋病流行状况
- Author:
LI Ling, YANG Xingguang, ZHANG Na, YU Haiying, HUANG Pengxiang, ZHU Xiaoyan, QIAN Yuesheng, HAO Lianzheng, WANG Guoyong, KANG Dianmin
1
Author Information
1. Shandong Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Jinan (250014), China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome;
Epidemiology;
Students
- From:
Chinese Journal of School Health
2021;42(10):1568-1570
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To analyze the epidemiological characteristics of HIV/AIDS infected students in Shandong Province, to provide a basis for the prevention and control of AIDS transmission in the student population.
Methods:All 863 HIV/AIDS students cases during 2010-2019 were collected in Shandong Province. Epidemiological characteristics was described and the trends in the 10 years since 2010 was analyzed.
Results:These 863 HIV/AIDS students were mainly transmitted through homosexual sex (763 cases, 88.41%), and the samples were mainly from voluntary consultation testing (433 cases, 50.17%). From 2010 to 2019, the proportion of student cases in the total number of cases showed an increasing trend ( χ 2 trend =30.21, P <0.01). Among them, the proportion of homosexual transmission cases increased year by year ( χ 2 trend =6.35, P =0.01), the proportion of cases aged 18-22 years increased year by year ( χ 2 trend =6.10, P =0.01), the proportion of cases with college degree or above increased year by year ( χ 2 trend =4.26, P =0.04). At present, voluntary consultation testing were the main source.There was no significant difference between the years of sample sources ( χ 2 trend =2.97, P =0.09).
Conclusion:The report number of students in Shandong Province are on the rise in recent years, especially those infected by same sex transmission, mainly with high education background, which calls for targeted strategies and intervention measures.