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Socially constructed exclusion : Understanding and mitigating the pervasive influences of HIV-related stigma. John de Wit, Professor and Director Centre for Social Research in Health (formerly National Centre in HIV Social Research) The University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia.
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Socially constructed exclusion: Understanding and mitigating the pervasive influences of HIV-related stigma John de Wit, Professor and Director Centre for Social Research in Health (formerly National Centre in HIV Social Research) The University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
Acknowledgements • Dr Loren Brener, Senior Research Fellow, CSRH • Dr Sean Slavin, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, CSRH • Mr Denton Callander, Research Assistant, CSRH • Ms Hannah Wilson, Research Assistant, CSRH • Dr Philippe Adam, Senior Research Fellow, CSRH
Background • HIV-related stigma and discrimination are formidable barriers to HIV responses, affecting prevention, diagnosis, treatment, care, support and impact mitigation
The Stigma Factor Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Background • HIV-related stigma and discrimination are formidable barriers to HIV responses, affecting prevention, diagnosis, treatment, care, support and impact mitigation • There is substantial and increasing evidence that the experience of stigma and discrimination has adverse effects on the health and wellbeing of people affected
Background • HIV-related stigma and discrimination are formidable barriers to HIV responses, affecting prevention, diagnosis, treatment, care, support and impact mitigation • There is substantial and increasing evidence that the experience of stigma and discrimination has adverse effects on the health and wellbeing of people affected • Strengthening responses to fight stigma and discrimination and mitigate its impact require a combination of critical analysis, sharing of experiences and robust research
Strengthening evidence base • Assessing HIV-related stigma and discrimination across countries, affected communities, and social settings • Development of measures to systematically examine and comparing the diversity of experiences and perspectives • Investigate factors that shape the experience, expression and impact of HIV-related stigma and discrimination • Develop, evaluate and implement interventions that address factors that influence stigma and discrimination
Stigma Audit • National Association of People with HIV Australia (NAPWHA) • Multi-method, community-owned, collaborative research • Including online survey of almost 700 PLHIV • To explore experiences of HIV stigma among PLHIV • To investigate factors contributing to experienced stigma • To assess the impact of stigma on health • To identify factors associated with and strategies to strengthen resilience
Findings from ongoing analyses • Moderate level of experienced stigma and discrimination as assessed with modified Berger et al. (2001) stigma scale; stigma is also experienced in relation to collecting and taking medication • Experienced stigma and discrimination is negatively associated with mental health, wellbeing and resilience; disclosure to specific social referents may moderate some experiences and impacts • PLHIV with visible symptoms report more stigma and worse outcomes; heterosexual PLHIV also feel more stigmatized but do not experience worse outcomes • Centrality of HIV to identity may compound negative experiences and impact, while these may be attenuated by attachment to an HIV positive community
Some key messages • HIV-related stigma and discrimination is recognized as a critical barrier to effective HIV responses • Collecting life saving antiretroviral drugs and taking them in social settings are experienced as sources of stigma • Experienced stigma is shaped by a range of personal, social, structural and health service characteristics that offer points of entry for stigma interventions • In addition to supporting and empowering individuals, undertaking information campaigns and advocating for structural change, interventions with health care workers and/or in health services continue to deserve attention.
Considerations for interventions • Who to focus on? Stigmatized – stigmatizer • Coping, empowerment – knowledge, structural change • What approaches do we know work? And why? • Little research, few studies of high quality • What interventions are being tested? • Dissemination of information, popular opinion leaders, community website • PLHIV telling stories about their lives; bringing together health care staff and PLHIV • Forming community-based organizations • Are processes influencing stigma being addressed? • Systematic intervention development