Derose Kathryn P, Payán Denise D, Fulcar María Altagracia, Terrero Sergio, Acevedo Ramón, Farías Hugo, Palar Kartika
Department of Behavioral and Policy Sciences, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California, United States of America.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jul 25;12(7):e0181568. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181568. eCollection 2017.
Food insecurity contributes to poor health outcomes among people living with HIV. In Latin America and the Caribbean, structural factors such as poverty, stigma, and inequality disproportionately affect women and may fuel both the HIV epidemic and food insecurity.
We examined factors contributing to food insecurity among women living with HIV (WLHIV) in the Dominican Republic (DR). Data collection included in-depth, semi-structured interviews in 2013 with 30 WLHIV with indications of food insecurity who resided in urban or peri-urban areas and were recruited from local HIV clinics. In-person interviews were conducted in Spanish. Transcripts were coded using content analysis methods and an inductive approach to identify principal and emergent themes.
Respondents identified economic instability as the primary driver of food insecurity, precipitated by enacted stigma in the labor and social domains. Women described experiences of HIV-related labor discrimination in formal and informal sectors. Women commonly reported illegal HIV testing by employers, and subsequent dismissal if HIV-positive, especially in tourism and free trade zones. Enacted stigma in the social domain manifested as gossip and rejection by family, friends, and neighbors and physical, verbal, and sexual abuse by intimate partners, distancing women from sources of economic and food support. These experiences with discrimination and abuse contributed to internalized stigma among respondents who, as a result, were fearful and hesitant to disclose their HIV status; some participants reported leaving spouses and/or families, resulting in further isolation from economic resources, food and other support. A minority of participants described social support by friends, spouses, families and support groups, which helped to ameliorate food insecurity and emotional distress.
Addressing food insecurity among WLHIV requires policy and programmatic interventions to enforce existing laws designed to protect the rights of people living with HIV, reduce HIV-related stigma, and improve gender equality.
粮食不安全会导致艾滋病毒感染者的健康状况不佳。在拉丁美洲和加勒比地区,贫困、耻辱感和不平等之类的结构性因素对女性的影响尤为严重,可能会助长艾滋病毒的传播以及粮食不安全问题。
我们研究了多米尼加共和国感染艾滋病毒的女性(WLHIV)面临粮食不安全问题的影响因素。数据收集工作包括在2013年对30名有粮食不安全迹象的感染艾滋病毒的女性进行深入的半结构化访谈,这些女性居住在城市或城郊地区,是从当地的艾滋病毒诊所招募而来。面对面访谈用西班牙语进行。访谈记录采用内容分析法和归纳法进行编码,以确定主要和新出现的主题。
受访者认为经济不稳定是粮食不安全的主要驱动因素,这是由劳动力和社会领域中实际存在的耻辱感引发的。女性描述了在正规和非正规部门遭受与艾滋病毒相关的劳动歧视的经历。女性普遍报告称雇主进行非法艾滋病毒检测,若检测呈阳性则随后被解雇,尤其是在旅游和自由贸易区。社会领域中实际存在的耻辱感表现为家人、朋友和邻居的流言蜚语和排斥,以及亲密伴侣的身体、言语和性虐待,使女性与经济和粮食支持来源疏远。这些歧视和虐待经历导致受访者产生内化的耻辱感,结果她们害怕且犹豫是否要披露自己的艾滋病毒感染状况;一些参与者报告称离开了配偶和/或家庭,从而进一步与经济资源、食物及其他支持隔绝。少数参与者描述了朋友、配偶、家人和支持团体给予的社会支持,这有助于缓解粮食不安全和情绪困扰。
解决感染艾滋病毒的女性的粮食不安全问题需要政策和方案干预措施,以执行旨在保护艾滋病毒感染者权利、减少与艾滋病毒相关的耻辱感并促进性别平等的现有法律。