Pantelic Marija, Steinert Janina I, Park Jay, Mellors Shaun, Murau Fungai
Department of Social Policy and Intervention, Oxford University, Oxford, UK.
Frontline AIDS, Brighton, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2019 Mar 19;4(2):e001285. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001285. eCollection 2019.
Self-stigma, also known as internalised stigma, is a global public health threat because it keeps people from accessing HIV and other health services. By hampering HIV testing, treatment and prevention, self-stigma can compromise the sustainability of health interventions and have serious epidemiological consequences. This review synthesised existing evidence of interventions aiming to reduce self-stigma experienced by people living with HIV and key populations affected by HIV in low-income and middle-income countries.
Studies were identified through bibliographic databases, grey literature sites, study registries, back referencing and contacts with researchers, and synthesised following Cochrane guidelines.
Of 5880 potentially relevant titles, 20 studies were included in the review. Represented in these studies were 9536 people (65% women) from Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Nepal, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda and Vietnam. Seventeen of the studies recruited people living with HIV (of which five focused specifically on pregnant women). The remaining three studies focused on young men who have sex with men, female sex workers and men who inject drugs. Studies were clustered into four categories based on the socioecological level of risk or resilience that they targeted: (1) individual level only, (2) individual and relational levels, (3) individual and structural levels and (4) structural level only. Thirteen studies targeting structural risks (with or without individual components) consistently produced significant reductions in self-stigma. The remaining seven studies that did not include a component to address structural risks produced mixed effects.
Structural interventions such as scale-up of antiretroviral treatment, prevention of medication stockouts, social empowerment and economic strengthening may help substantially reduce self-stigma among individuals. More research is urgently needed to understand how to reduce self-stigma among young people and key populations, as well as how to tackle intersectional self-stigma.
自我污名化,也称为内化污名,是一种全球公共卫生威胁,因为它阻碍人们获得艾滋病毒和其他卫生服务。通过妨碍艾滋病毒检测、治疗和预防,自我污名化会损害卫生干预措施的可持续性,并产生严重的流行病学后果。本综述综合了旨在减少低收入和中等收入国家艾滋病毒感染者以及受艾滋病毒影响的关键人群所经历的自我污名化的现有干预证据。
通过文献数据库、灰色文献网站、研究注册库、反向参考文献以及与研究人员的联系来识别研究,并按照Cochrane指南进行综合。
在5880个潜在相关标题中,有20项研究被纳入综述。这些研究涵盖了来自埃塞俄比亚、印度、肯尼亚、莱索托、马拉维、尼泊尔、南非、斯威士兰、坦桑尼亚、泰国、乌干达和越南的9536人(65%为女性)。其中17项研究招募了艾滋病毒感染者(其中5项专门针对孕妇)。其余3项研究聚焦于男男性行为者、女性性工作者和注射吸毒者。根据所针对的社会生态风险或复原力水平,研究被分为四类:(1)仅个体层面,(2)个体和关系层面,(3)个体和结构层面,(4)仅结构层面。针对结构风险(有或没有个体组成部分)的13项研究始终显著降低了自我污名化。其余7项未包括解决结构风险组成部分的研究产生了混合效果。
扩大抗逆转录病毒治疗规模、预防药品短缺、社会赋权和经济增强等结构性干预措施可能有助于大幅减少个体的自我污名化。迫切需要更多研究来了解如何减少年轻人和关键人群中的自我污名化,以及如何应对交叉性自我污名化。