Literature DB >> 17255063

Constrained but not determined by stigma: resistance by African American women living with HIV.

Aaron G Buseh1, Patricia E Stevens.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: HIV stigma is widely regarded as a major obstacle to effective HIV prevention, risk reduction, testing, and treatment. Research is urgently needed to anticipate, understand, and combat HIV stigma in the African American cultural context because African Americans have the highest HIV incidence, HIV/AIDS prevalence, and HIV mortality.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this analysis was to explore African American women's narratives of living with HIV to understand how they experienced and responded to HIV stigma.
METHOD: Twenty-nine HIV-infected African American women participated in this longitudinal qualitative study. Each narrated her life since HIV diagnosis in ten open-ended interviews conducted over the course of two years. A multi-staged narrative analysis was used.
FINDINGS: HIV stigma, which these African American women experienced on multiple levels, manifested internally as existential despair, socially as shunning and callousness, and institutionally as disregard. While participants were constrained by this multi-layered hegemonic cultural negativity about HIV, they refused to be determined by it. Their stories demonstrate how they resisted stigma. Over time, by enlisting support, facing the illness, disclosing only at strategic times, redefining stigma as ignorance, and becoming advocates, they were able to challenge and oppose the shame and discredit that HIV infection had brought into their lives.
CONCLUSION: The elements of stigma resistance described in this study may be starting points for designing participatory interventions for and with African American women living with HIV.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17255063     DOI: 10.1300/J013v44n03_01

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Women Health        ISSN: 0363-0242


  20 in total

1.  Substance use, mental illness, and familial conflict non-negotiation among HIV-positive African-Americans: latent class regression and a new syndemic framework.

Authors:  Allysha C Robinson; Amy R Knowlton; Andrea C Gielen; Joseph J Gallo
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2015-08-22

2.  Older and Younger African Americans' Story Schemas and Experiences of Living with HIV/AIDS.

Authors:  Andrea Nevedal; Stewart Neufeld; Mark Luborsky; Andrea Sankar
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2017-06

3.  Development and usability evaluation of the mHealth Tool for Lung Cancer (mHealth TLC): a virtual world health game for lung cancer patients.

Authors:  Cati G Brown-Johnson; Beth Berrean; Janine K Cataldo
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2015-01-03

4.  Explorations of lung cancer stigma for female long-term survivors.

Authors:  Cati Brown; Janine Cataldo
Journal:  Nurs Inq       Date:  2013-02-16       Impact factor: 2.393

5.  Still I rise: The need for self-validation and self-care in the midst of adversities faced by Black women with HIV.

Authors:  Sannisha K Dale; Catherine Pierre-Louis; Laura M Bogart; Conall O'Cleirigh; Steven A Safren
Journal:  Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol       Date:  2017-06-12

6.  Social and structural determinants of HIV treatment and care among black women living with HIV infection: a systematic review: 2005-2016.

Authors:  Angelica Geter; Madeline Y Sutton; Donna Hubbard McCree
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2018-01-28

7.  Lung cancer stigma, anxiety, depression, and quality of life.

Authors:  Cati G Brown Johnson; Jennifer L Brodsky; Janine K Cataldo
Journal:  J Psychosoc Oncol       Date:  2014

Review 8.  Exploring the concept of HIV-related stigma.

Authors:  Aubrey L Florom-Smith; Joseph P De Santis
Journal:  Nurs Forum       Date:  2012 Jul-Sep

9.  HIV-Related Stigma and Viral Suppression Among African-American Women: Exploring the Mediating Roles of Depression and ART Nonadherence.

Authors:  Lauren Lipira; Emily C Williams; David Huh; Christopher G Kemp; Paul E Nevin; Preston Greene; Joseph M Unger; Patrick Heagerty; Audrey L French; Susan E Cohn; Janet M Turan; Michael J Mugavero; Jane M Simoni; Michele P Andrasik; Deepa Rao
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2019-08

10.  In their own words: A qualitative study of the psychosocial concerns of posttreatment and long-term lung cancer survivors.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Rohan; Jennifer Boehm; Kristine Gabuten Allen; Jon Poehlman
Journal:  J Psychosoc Oncol       Date:  2016-01-14
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