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Future research should examine the socioeconomic context that supports this networkpattern.
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Future research should examine the context that supports this networkpattern.
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Objectives: We determined the prevalence, distribution, and correlates of US women's involvement in concurrent sexual partnerships, a sexual- networkpattern that speeds population-wide HIV dissemination.
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Garrick and Marshall's research into street networkpatterns began in Davis, California.
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Networkpatterns can also physically change after a giant outage.
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Conclusion: Concurrency and bridging likely contribute to increased heterosexual HIV transmission among blacks in the South; contextual factors promote these networkpatterns in this population.
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The social and economic environment in which many African Americans live shapes sexual networkpatterns and increases personal infection risk almost independently of personal behavior.