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Mar 28, 2024
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SOC 6180 - AIDS and Society Spring. 4 credits.
Enrollment limited to: graduate students and seniors with permission of instructor.
D. Heckathorn.
AIDS is a disease for which sociology is especially relevant. Unlike influenzas that spread through mere proximity or casual contact, AIDS is spread through social networks-typically sexual or drug- using networks. The first recognition of the network-basis of HIV transmission occurred in the early 1980s when the CDC established a task force to investigate a puzzling syndrome involving weakened immune systems. A sociologist on the team, William Darrow, suggested asking patients whether they knew one another. Their answers revealed a network linking patients within the East and West Coast sites where early cases where found, and also linking them across the two coasts. In this way, the network-basis of HIV transmission became clear.
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