Department of Occupational Therapy, University of Missouri, 420 Lewis Hall, Columbia, MO 65203, USA.
Health Place. 2011 Mar;17(2):598-605. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2010.12.017. Epub 2010 Dec 30.
Mainstream research and the popular media often equate female-headship with household vulnerability, crisis, and disorganization. Epidemic levels of HIV/AIDS in some parts of sub-Saharan Africa compound this portrait of hopelessness. In South Africa, the impact of HIV/AIDS on households depends on race, class, and place. As female-headed households increase in number, we need to better understand how female-heads in poor rural areas contend with AIDS related challenges. We analyze qualitative interviews with 16 female heads and the members of their households in a rural community to examine the response to AIDS-related illness, death, or caring for orphaned children. Our analysis examines female-heads' financial and social resources and how these resources buffer against hardship in households affected by AIDS. We find considerable heterogeneity among rural female-headed households and their access to resources to combat AIDS-related hardship. Our findings have important policy implications both in terms of identifying individual and household vulnerabilities as well as leveraging the potential for resilience for female-heads in rural South African communities.
主流研究和大众媒体常常将女性当家作主与家庭脆弱、危机和混乱联系起来。撒哈拉以南非洲部分地区艾滋病毒/艾滋病的流行水平使这种无望的形象更加恶化。在南非,艾滋病毒/艾滋病对家庭的影响取决于种族、阶级和地点。随着女性当家作主的家庭数量的增加,我们需要更好地了解贫困农村地区的女性当家如何应对与艾滋病相关的挑战。我们分析了对一个农村社区的 16 名女性户主及其家庭成员的定性访谈,以研究她们对艾滋病相关疾病、死亡或照顾孤儿的反应。我们的分析考察了女性户主的财务和社会资源,以及这些资源如何缓冲艾滋病影响家庭的困难。我们发现,农村女性户主家庭之间存在相当大的异质性,以及她们获得资源以应对与艾滋病相关的困难的情况也各不相同。我们的研究结果对政策制定具有重要意义,既可以确定个人和家庭的脆弱性,也可以利用农村南非社区女性户主的适应能力的潜力。