| Literature DB >> 28729990 |
Anna Wickenden1, Stephanie Nixon2,3, Karen K Yoshida4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women with a disability are often characterised as a homogenous social group consigned to a cultural stereotype with assumptions of dependence, asexuality and gender neutrality. Furthermore, there is a void of research about the experience of people with disabilities following diagnosis with HIV. Little is known about how HIV diagnosis intersects with disability and gender and how it shapes the experiences of intimacy and gender roles of those negotiating this intersection.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 28729990 PMCID: PMC5442584 DOI: 10.4102/ajod.v2i1.50
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr J Disabil ISSN: 2223-9170
Participants Characteristics.
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| No. Of Participants: | 12 |
| Sex: | Female |
| Age Range: | 29–61 |
| Hearing | 1 |
| Mobility | 7 (1 also had intellectual impairment) |
| Visual | 2 |
| Intellectual | 2 (1 also had physical impairment) |
|
How is life different for you now that you have a disability and are also living with HIV? Do people have a different attitude toward you? How is life the same? What is your experience like within your family (now that you have both a disability and HIV)? Do they know you are HIV-positive? How did they react? Has this changed the way they treat you? Can you tell me any stories about how being HIV-positive has influenced your feeling of belonging or not belonging within your community? Have you ever had to fight for something that others have because you have a disability and HIV? How do you think your experience with HIV might be different from a non-disabled person who has HIV? How might it be the same? Do you feel that having a disability helps you handle HIV better in some ways than a non-disabled person? If so, how? How do you think your experience of disability might be different from other disabled people who are not HIV-positive? How might it be the same? Has HIV changed anything in terms of your relationships or intimacy? Some people say that having HIV is itself a disability. What do you think about that? |