Literature DB >> 10164198

Confidentiality and HIV status in Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa: implications, resistances and challenges.

G Seidel1.   

Abstract

This article provides a contextualized comparison and analysis of the former Kwazulu and the new Kwazulu-Natal policy documents on HIV confidentiality, the differing practices within the region, and their implications for support and gender. It is based on interviews with key players in the regional NACOSA (National AIDS Convention of South Africa), and participation in meetings between August and November 1995. The main division is between those influenced by other rural African models, especially the Zambian concept of "shared confidentiality' as a way of ensuring support, and who have gone on to develop more community-based practices to destigmatize the disease, in contrast with the stronger emphasis in the new document on individual rights, assuming a more urban constituency, and where "shared confidentiality' is much more circumscribed. One of the difficulties of the new policy in which "confidentiality' is interpreted as "secrecy', is that it would seem to foreclose and neutralize lay and community support, as distinct from the earlier and unacknowledged policy of former Kwazulu. It also seeks to provide an enhanced role for professional counsellors. This psychologizing of the infection and the distancing from "community', and from women's groups, is surprising in a country in whose townships "community' remains a powerful motivating symbol, and where NGOs and peer groups have been identified everywhere as central to effective HIV/AIDS related prevention, care and support for behavior change.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health Care and Public Health; Professional Patient Relationship; Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome; Africa; Africa South Of The Sahara; Confidential Information; Developing Countries; Diseases; English Speaking Africa; Ethics; Hiv Infections; Policy; Social Policy; South Africa; Southern Africa; Viral Diseases

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 10164198     DOI: 10.1093/heapol/11.4.418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Policy Plan        ISSN: 0268-1080            Impact factor:   3.344


  7 in total

Review 1.  Facilitating HIV disclosure across diverse settings: a review.

Authors:  Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer; Parijat Baijal; Elisabetta Pegurri
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2011-04-14       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 2.  The utilization of testing and counseling for HIV: a review of the social and behavioral evidence.

Authors:  Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer; Michelle Osborn
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2007-08-29       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 3.  The social and gender context of HIV disclosure in sub-Saharan Africa: a review of policies and practices.

Authors:  Sarah Bott; Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer
Journal:  SAHARA J       Date:  2013-06-28

Review 4.  Theoretical models of parental HIV disclosure: a critical review.

Authors:  Shan Qiao; Xiaoming Li; Bonita Stanton
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2012-08-06

5.  High acceptability for cell phone text messages to improve communication of laboratory results with HIV-infected patients in rural Uganda: a cross-sectional survey study.

Authors:  Mark J Siedner; Jessica E Haberer; Mwebesa Bosco Bwana; Norma C Ware; David R Bangsberg
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2012-06-21       Impact factor: 2.796

6.  Challenges in the Area of Training and Prevention at the HIV Triangulation Clinic, Kerman, Iran.

Authors:  Farzaneh Zolala; Ali Akbar Haghdoost; Roohollah Zahmatkesh; Mehdi Shafiei
Journal:  Addict Health       Date:  2014

7.  Assessment of HIV-related stigma and determinants among people living with HIV/AIDS in Abeokuta, Nigeria: A cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Olaide Olutoyin Oke; Adeolu Oladayo Akinboro; Fatai Olatunde Olanrewaju; Olatunbosun Ayokunle Oke; Ayanfe Samuel Omololu
Journal:  SAGE Open Med       Date:  2019-08-08
  7 in total

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