HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University, 1051 Riverside Drive #15, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Community Ment Health J. 2010 Feb;46(1):56-64. doi: 10.1007/s10597-009-9209-4. Epub 2009 Jun 20.
We examined the associations between perceived mental illness stigma and HIV risk and protective behaviors among adults with severe mental illness (SMI) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. We measured mental illness stigma across three domains ("Personal Experiences," "Perceived Attractiveness," and "Relationship Discrimination"), and examined the relationship between experiences of stigma in each domain and HIV risk and protective behaviors over the past 3 months in 98 outpatients with SMI. Those who reported greater "Relationship Discrimination" stigma were significantly more likely to be sexually active and to have unprotected sex; they were significantly less likely to report deliberately having fewer partners as a way to protect themselves from HIV. The role of stigma in unprotected sexual behavior should be examined further and considered in any HIV prevention intervention for people with SMI.
我们研究了巴西里约热内卢严重精神疾病(SMI)患者中感知到的精神疾病耻辱感与 HIV 风险和保护行为之间的关系。我们在三个领域(“个人经历”、“感知吸引力”和“关系歧视”)衡量了精神疾病耻辱感,并调查了在过去 3 个月中,98 名 SMI 门诊患者在每个领域的耻辱感经历与 HIV 风险和保护行为之间的关系。那些报告更多“关系歧视”耻辱感的人,性活跃和无保护性行为的可能性显著更高;他们报告故意减少性伴侣以保护自己免受 HIV 感染的可能性显著更低。在任何针对 SMI 患者的 HIV 预防干预措施中,都应进一步研究耻辱感在无保护性行为中的作用,并予以考虑。