Hawa Roula N, Underhill Angela, Logie Carmen H, Islam Shazia, Loutfy Mona
Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital , Toronto , Canada.
Faculty of Education, Queen's University , Kingston , Canada.
Ethn Health. 2019 Nov;24(8):945-959. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2017.1378806. Epub 2017 Sep 18.
Using a community-based, socialist feminist qualitative study, and an emergent research design, we explored the unique individual experiences of South Asian immigrant women living with HIV in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) of Ontario, Canada. We assessed both the HIV risk context and the strategies for HIV education and prevention as expressed by study participants. Grounded in Connell's social theory of gender, a thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with 12 women yielded six themes related to the power and impact of stigmatization, community's denial of HIV, infidelity, manifested in resistance to discussing sex and condom use, non-disclosure, and lack of HIV knowledge. This study validated the legitimacy of listening to the voices of South Asian immigrant women living with HIV, who communicated 20 recommendations for researchers, educators, community organizations, and service providers to culturally-tailor HIV education programs.
我们采用基于社区的社会主义女性主义定性研究方法和新兴研究设计,探索了加拿大安大略省大多伦多地区(GTA)感染艾滋病毒的南亚移民妇女的独特个人经历。我们评估了研究参与者所表达的艾滋病毒风险背景以及艾滋病毒教育和预防策略。基于康奈尔的社会性别理论,对12名女性进行的半结构化访谈的主题分析得出了六个主题,这些主题与污名化的力量和影响、社区对艾滋病毒的否认、不忠(表现为抗拒讨论性行为和使用避孕套)、不透露病情以及缺乏艾滋病毒知识有关。这项研究证实了倾听感染艾滋病毒的南亚移民妇女声音的合理性,她们为研究人员、教育工作者、社区组织和服务提供者提出了20条建议,以便在文化上量身定制艾滋病毒教育项目。