Thirlway Frances, Nyamurungi Kellen Namusisi, Matovu Joseph K B, Miti Andrew Kibuuka, Mdege Noreen Dadirai
Department of Sociology, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, UK.
Department of Health Policy Planning and Management, School of Public Health, Makerere University, Kampala P.O Box 7072, Kampala, Uganda.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 Mar;273:113759. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113759. Epub 2021 Feb 17.
Sub-Saharan Africa carries a disproportionate burden of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Tobacco use amongst people living with HIV is higher than in the general population even though it increases the risk of life-threatening opportunistic infections including tuberculosis (TB). Research on tobacco use and cessation amongst people living with HIV in Africa is sparse and it is not clear what interventions might achieve lasting cessation. We carried out qualitative interviews in Uganda in 2019 with 12 current and 13 former tobacco users (19 men and 6 women) receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in four contrasting locations. We also interviewed 13 HIV clinic staff. We found that tobacco use and cessation were tied into the wider moral framework of ART adherence, but that the therapeutic citizenship fashioned by ART regimes was experienced more as social control than empowerment. Patients were advised to stop using tobacco; those who did not concealed this from health workers, who associated both tobacco and alcohol use with ART adherence failure. Most of those who quit tobacco did so following the biographical disruption of serious TB rather than HIV diagnosis or ART treatment, but social support from family and friends was key to sustained cessation. We put forward a model of barriers and facilitators to smoking cessation and ART adherence based on engagement with either 'reputation' or 'respectability'. Reputation involved pressure to enjoy tobacco with friends whereas family-oriented respectability demanded cessation, but those excluded by isolation or precarity escaped anxiety and depression by smoking and drinking with their peers.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区承受着不成比例的人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)负担。尽管吸烟会增加包括结核病(TB)在内的危及生命的机会性感染风险,但HIV感染者中的吸烟率高于普通人群。非洲针对HIV感染者吸烟及戒烟情况的研究很少,目前尚不清楚何种干预措施能够实现持久戒烟。2019年,我们在乌干达对四个不同地点接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的12名现吸烟者和13名曾经吸烟者(19名男性和6名女性)进行了定性访谈。我们还采访了13名HIV诊所工作人员。我们发现,吸烟及戒烟与ART依从性更广泛的道德框架相关联,但ART治疗模式塑造的治疗公民身份更多地被视为一种社会控制而非赋权。患者被建议戒烟;那些没有戒烟的患者向医护人员隐瞒了这一情况,而医护人员将吸烟和饮酒都与ART治疗依从性失败联系在一起。大多数戒烟者是在因严重结核病而非HIV诊断或ART治疗导致生活经历中断之后才戒烟的,但家人和朋友的社会支持是持续戒烟的关键。我们基于与“声誉”或“体面”的关联,提出了一个关于戒烟及ART治疗依从性的障碍和促进因素模型。声誉意味着来自与朋友一起享受烟草的压力,而以家庭为导向的体面则要求戒烟,但那些因孤立或不稳定而被排斥在外的人通过与同龄人一起吸烟和饮酒来逃避焦虑和抑郁。