Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e26814. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026814. Epub 2011 Oct 26.
HIV/AIDS related stigma is a major barrier to uptake of HIV testing and counselling (HTC). We assessed the extent of stigmatising attitudes expressed by participants offered community-based HTC, and their anticipated stigma from others to assess relationship with HIV test uptake. From these data, we constructed a brief stigma scale for use around the time of HIV testing.
Adult members of 60 households in urban Blantyre, Malawi, were selected using population-weighted random cluster sampling and offered HTC with the option to self-test before confirmatory HTC. Prior to HTC a 15-item HIV stigma questionnaire was administered. We used association testing and principal components analysis (PCA) to construct a scale measure of stigma. Of 226 adults invited to participate, 216 (95.6%) completed questionnaires and 198/216 (91.7%) opted to undergo HTC (all self-tested). Stigmatising attitudes were uncommon, but anticipated stigma was common, especially fearing verbal abuse (22%) or being abandoned by their partner (11%). Three questions showed little association or consistency with the remaining 12 stigma questions and were not included in the final scale. For the 12-question final scale, Cronbach's alpha was 0.75. Level of stigma was not associated with previously having tested for HIV (p = 0.318) or agreeing to HTC (p = 0.379), but was associated with expressed worry about being or becoming HIV infected (p = 0.003).
Anticipated stigma prior to HTC was common among both men and women. However, the high uptake of HTC suggests that this did not translate into reluctance to accept community-based testing. We constructed a brief scale to measure stigma at the time of HIV testing that could rapidly identify individuals requiring additional support following diagnosis and monitor the impact of increasing availability of community-based HTC on prevalence of stigma.
艾滋病相关污名是接受艾滋病毒检测和咨询(HTC)的主要障碍。我们评估了接受社区为基础的 HTC 的参与者表达的污名化态度的程度,以及他们预期的来自他人的污名化,以评估与艾滋病毒检测的关系。根据这些数据,我们构建了一个简短的污名量表,用于 HIV 检测时使用。
在马拉维布兰太尔市的 60 户家庭中,采用人口加权随机聚类抽样方法选择成年成员,并提供 HTC 选择在确认 HTC 之前进行自我检测。在 HTC 之前,进行了一个包含 15 个项目的 HIV 污名问卷。我们使用关联测试和主成分分析(PCA)来构建污名量表的度量。在邀请的 226 名成年人中,有 216 名(95.6%)完成了问卷,198/216 名(91.7%)选择接受 HTC(均为自我检测)。污名化态度不常见,但预期的污名化很常见,尤其是害怕遭受言语虐待(22%)或被伴侣抛弃(11%)。三个问题与其余 12 个污名问题的关联或一致性较小,因此未包含在最终量表中。对于 12 个问题的最终量表,克朗巴赫的 alpha 为 0.75。污名程度与以前是否接受过 HIV 检测(p = 0.318)或同意接受 HTC(p = 0.379)无关,但与表达对感染或成为 HIV 感染的担忧有关(p = 0.003)。
在接受 HTC 之前,男性和女性都普遍存在预期的污名化。然而,HTC 的高接受率表明,这并没有转化为不愿意接受社区为基础的检测。我们构建了一个简短的量表来衡量 HIV 检测时的污名化程度,这可以快速识别出需要在诊断后提供额外支持的个体,并监测社区为基础的 HTC 可用性增加对污名化流行程度的影响。