Literature DB >> 25871379

'If the doctors see that they don't know how to cure the disease, they say it's AIDS': How older women in rural South Africa make sense of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Enid Schatz1, Leah Gilbert, Courtney McDonald.   

Abstract

South Africa, like other sub-Saharan African countries, is in the midst of the AIDS epidemic. Older women, here defined as aged 60 years and older, while at lower risk of infection than those aged 20-50, are amongst those deeply 'affected' by the epidemic. In rural areas, older women, who have always played central roles in social reproduction in South African households and families, bear the brunt of care giving for the sick and dying. For this reason, it is important to explore how these women understand the epidemic. In South Africa, the prominence of traditional healers and medicine alongside biomedicine has led to multiple ways of perceiving, explaining and treating illness. This paper explores the various discourses older women in rural South Africa employ to make sense of the HIV/ AIDS epidemic in their daily lives. The aim is to better understand how these women construct the epidemic and how this knowledge can be used to benefit education and treatment endeavours in similar contexts. This paper draws on interview data collected as part of the Gogo Project conducted in the Medical Research Council (MRC)/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit. Sixty women between the ages of 60 and 75 years living in the rural Agincourt sub-district participated in three in-depth, semi-structured interviews. The respondents in this study relied on a variety of discourses to make sense of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. They displayed a high level of knowledge based on biomedical education, however, they expressed ideas, often simultaneously, that seemed to contradict this education. Their ability to employ seemingly contradictory discourses represents the need to place the epidemic within familiar 'explanatory models' that are based on these women's life experiences and local knowledge.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aging; gender; medical pluralism; perceptions of health and illness; traditional medicine/health care

Year:  2013        PMID: 25871379     DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2013.851719

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res        ISSN: 1608-5906            Impact factor:   1.300


  8 in total

1.  'Taking care' in the age of AIDS: older rural South Africans' strategies for surviving the HIV epidemic.

Authors:  Nicole Angotti; Sanyu A Mojola; Enid Schatz; Jill R Williams; F Xavier Gómez-Olivé
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2017-07-25

2.  'Sometimes it is not about men': Gendered and generational discourses of caregiving HIV transmission in a rural South African setting.

Authors:  Sanyu A Mojola; Nicole Angotti
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2019-04-23

3.  "A NOWADAYS DISEASE": HIV/AIDS AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN A RURAL SOUTH AFRICAN COMMUNITY.

Authors:  Sanyu A Mojola; Nicole Angotti; Enid Schatz; Brian Houle
Journal:  AJS       Date:  2021-11

4.  The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health behaviours of people living with and beyond breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer-a qualitative study.

Authors:  Caroline Buck; Simon Pini; Phillippa Lally; Rebecca J Beeken; Abigail Fisher
Journal:  J Cancer Surviv       Date:  2022-07-19       Impact factor: 4.062

5.  Reframing vulnerability: Mozambican refugees' access to state-funded pensions in rural South Africa.

Authors:  Enid J Schatz
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2009-01-14

6.  How to "Live a Good Life": Aging and HIV Testing in Rural South Africa.

Authors:  Enid Schatz; Brian Houle; Sanyu A Mojola; Nicole Angotti; Jill Williams
Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2018-01-10

7.  Changing use of traditional healthcare amongst those dying of HIV related disease and TB in rural South Africa from 2003 - 2011: a retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Paul Mee; Ryan G Wagner; Francesc Xavier Gómez-Olivé; Chodziwadziwa Kabudula; Kathleen Kahn; Sangeetha Madhavan; Mark Collinson; Peter Byass; Stephen M Tollman
Journal:  BMC Complement Altern Med       Date:  2014-12-17       Impact factor: 3.659

8.  Older female caregivers and HIV/AIDS-related secondary stigma in rural South Africa.

Authors:  Catherine Ogunmefun; Leah Gilbert; Enid Schatz
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2011-03
  8 in total

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