Social disintegration and the spread of AIDS: thresholds for propagation along 'sociogeographic' networks.

Previous work on the asymptotic spread of HIV infection along a low dimensional 'sociogeographic' network--a social network characteristically embedded within a limited geographic area--is extended to explore threshold conditions under which the infection extends widely beyond an initial set of infected individuals or communities. Results for one dimension suggest that threshold behavior is analogous to a chain reaction with criticality determined conjointly by the susceptibility of individuals within a community to a nexus of behavior conducive to rapid HIV spread and by the probability of transmission between susceptible communities. Once threshold is exceeded, a stochastic reformulation finds the asymptotic rate of transmission between communities may be markedly raised by positive correlation between susceptibility to rapid disease spread within a community and the transmissibility between communities, for example outmigration driven by social disintegration or residential instability arising from inherent structural factors associated with community susceptibility, as with male prostitution. Examination of threshold conditions for higher dimensional sociogeographic networks most likely characteristic of disease spread beyond the 'deep ghettos' now suffering the highest burden of infection suggests it is at least as, and likely more, effective to decrease the fraction of population susceptible to the high risk behavioral nexus as it is to lower the probability of disease transmission between susceptible individuals or communities.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

[1]  Scott J. South Metropolitan migration and social problems. , 1987 .

[2]  T. Nicholson,et al.  Chemical Foreplay among Black and White Students , 1982 .

[3]  Alexander H. Leighton,et al.  My name is legion : foundations for a theory of man in relation to culture , 1960 .

[4]  G Macdonald,et al.  The dynamics of helminth infections, with special reference to schistosomes. , 1965, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[5]  Disorder, Crime and Community Decline , 1988 .

[6]  R. Wallace ‘Homelessness’, Contagious Destruction of Housing, and Municipal Service Cuts in New York City: 2. Dynamics of a Housing Famine , 1990 .

[7]  Wesley G. Skogan,et al.  Fear of Crime and Neighborhood Change , 1986, Crime and Justice.

[8]  C. S. Holling Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems , 1973 .

[9]  E. Morse,et al.  The male street prostitute: a vector for transmission of HIV infection into the heterosexual world. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[10]  R. Wallace Traveling waves of HIV infection on a low dimensional 'socio-geographic' network. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[11]  R. Wallace,et al.  ‘Homelessness’, Contagious Destruction of Housing, and Municipal Service Cuts in New York City: 1. Demographics of a Housing Deficit , 1989 .

[12]  M. Fullilove,et al.  AIDS Deaths in the Bronx 1983–1988: Spatiotemporal Analysis from a Sociogeographic Perspective , 1991, Environment & planning A.

[13]  J. Hepburn,et al.  Patterns in Criminal Homicide in Chicago , 1968 .

[14]  L. Zabin,et al.  Substance use and its relation to sexual activity among inner-city adolescents. , 1986, Journal of adolescent health care : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine.

[15]  R. Sampson,et al.  Community Structure and Crime: Testing Social-Disorganization Theory , 1989, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  Carol B. Stack All our kin : strategies for survival in a Black community , 1975 .

[17]  I. Susser Norman Street: Poverty and Politics in an Urban Neighborhood , 1982 .

[18]  Roy M. Anderson,et al.  The Transmission Dynamics of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) , 1988 .

[19]  Robert D. Crutchfield,et al.  Crime Rate and Social Integration The Impact of Metropolitan Mobility , 1982 .

[20]  Colin McDiarmid General percolation and random graphs , 1981, Advances in Applied Probability.

[21]  R. Rothenberg,et al.  Gonorrhea as a Social Disease , 1985, Sexually transmitted diseases.

[22]  D. Osgood,et al.  The generality of deviance in late adolescence and early adulthood. , 1988 .

[23]  R. Durrett Lecture notes on particle systems and percolation , 1988 .

[24]  R. Wallace,et al.  A synergism of plagues: "planned shrinkage," contagious housing destruction, and AIDS in the Bronx. , 1988, Environmental research.

[25]  E. Struening,et al.  Housing conditions and the quality of children at birth. , 1990, Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine.

[26]  R. Wallace,et al.  Urban desertification, public health and public order: 'planned shrinkage', violent death, substance abuse and AIDS in the Bronx. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[27]  R Jessor,et al.  Structure of problem behavior in adolescence and young adulthood. , 1985, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[28]  Colin McDiarmid General first-passage percolation , 1983 .

[29]  R. Wallace,et al.  Origins of public health collapse in New York City: the dynamics of planned shrinkage, contagious urban decay and social disintegration. , 1990, Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine.

[30]  J. Hammersley A generalization of McDiarmid's theorem for mixed Bernoulli percolation , 1980, Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.

[31]  William Feller,et al.  An Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications , 1967 .

[32]  S. Levin Lectu re Notes in Biomathematics , 1983 .