Dang S
School of Development Studies, University of East Anglia, UK.
Asia Pac J Public Health. 2007;19 Spec No:70-1. doi: 10.1177/101053950701901S12.
The purpose of this research is to understand how Nepal's conflict is affecting vulnerabilities to HIV and exposure to the virus among females and males. Data was primarily collected during a three-week exploratory field study of Surkhet district in 2005. Twenty key informants and 35 stakeholders were interviewed, with the results triangulated by six focus groups. Documentary sources complement this data. A sociological model is designed depicting how the impact of the conflict and the responses of those affected have given rise to three different vulnerabilities to HIV: imposed contextual, conditional contextual and internalised. The paper concludes that the majority of those affected by Nepal's conflict are more vulnerable to the disease and that exposure to the virus may be increasing with forced displacement and migration.
本研究的目的是了解尼泊尔的冲突如何影响男性和女性感染艾滋病毒的易感性以及接触该病毒的情况。数据主要收集于2005年对苏尔凯特地区进行的为期三周的探索性实地研究期间。采访了20名关键信息提供者和35名利益相关者,结果由六个焦点小组进行了三角验证。文献资料补充了这些数据。设计了一个社会学模型,描述冲突的影响以及受影响者的应对措施如何导致三种不同的艾滋病毒易感性:强加的情境性、条件性情境性和内化性。本文得出结论,受尼泊尔冲突影响的大多数人更容易感染该疾病,而且随着被迫流离失所和迁移,接触病毒的情况可能正在增加。