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Climate change linked with worse HIV prevention and care

Climate change-related extreme weather events, such as drought and flooding, were associated with poorer HIV prevention outcomes, including reduced HIV testing. Extreme weather events were also linked to increased practices that elevate HIV risk, such as transactional sex and condomless sex, as well as increases in new HIV infection.

Photo by Anna Shvets from Pexels.com

New challenges in HIV prevention and care are emerging due to climate change.

This is according to a review – “Climate change and extreme weather events and linkages with HIV outcomes: recent advances and ways forward” by Carmen Logie and Andie MacNeil – published in Current Opinions in Infectious Disease.

The researchers from the University of Toronto analyzed 22 recent studies exploring HIV-related outcomes in the context of climate change and identified several links between extreme weather events and HIV prevention and care.

Climate change-related extreme weather events, such as drought and flooding, were associated with poorer HIV prevention outcomes, including reduced HIV testing. Extreme weather events were also linked to increased practices that elevate HIV risk, such as transactional sex and condomless sex, as well as increases in new HIV infection.

“Climate change impacts HIV prevention through several mechanistic pathways,” said Logie. “Extreme weather events cause structural damage to health care infrastructure and increase migration and displacement, both of which disrupt access to HIV clinics for prevention and testing. We also see increases in practices that increase HIV risk due to climate change-related resource scarcity.”

“Extreme weather events present new challenges with access to HIV care and treatment adherence,” said co-author MacNeil. “Multilevel strategies are needed to mitigate the effects of climate change on HIV care, such as long-lasting antiretroviral therapy, increased medication dispensing supplies, and community-based medication delivery and outreach programs.”

They also described a persisting lack of knowledge on extreme weather events and HIV among key marginalized populations, including sex workers, people who use drugs, and gender diverse persons, as well as how extreme weather events interact with intersecting forms of stigma.

The researchers are hopeful that these findings can help offer ways forward for research, policy, and practice.

“Innovative HIV interventions, such as long-acting PrEP, mobile pharmacies and health clinics, and interventions that reduce food and water insecurity may all contribute to improving HIV care during extreme weather events. More research and evaluation is needed to test climate-change informed HIV prevention and intervention strategies,” said Logie. “The integration of disaster preparedness and HIV care provides new opportunities to optimize HIV care in our changing climate.”

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