Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Obstetrics, Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 May 17;16(5):e0249462. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249462. eCollection 2021.
HIV-related stigma is a frequently cited barrier to HIV testing and care engagement. A nuanced understanding of HIV-related stigma is critical for developing stigma-reduction interventions to optimize HIV-related outcomes. This qualitative study documented HIV-related stigma across eight communities in east Africa during the baseline year of a large HIV test-and-treat trial (SEARCH, NCT: 01864603), prior to implementation of widespread community HIV testing campaigns and efforts to link individuals with HIV to care and treatment. Findings revealed experiences of enacted, internalized and anticipated stigma that were highly gendered, and more pronounced in communities with lower HIV prevalence; women, overwhelmingly, both held and were targets of stigmatizing attitudes about HIV. Past experiences with enacted stigma included acts of segregation, verbal discrimination, physical violence, humiliation and rejection. Narratives among women, in particular, revealed acute internalized stigma including feelings of worthlessness, shame, embarrassment, and these resulted in anxiety and depression, including suicidality among a small number of women. Anticipated stigma included fears of marital dissolution, verbal and physical abuse, gossip and public ridicule. Anticipated stigma was especially salient for women who held internalized stigma and who had experienced enacted stigma from their partners. Anticipated stigma led to care avoidance, care-seeking at remote facilities, and hiding of HIV medications. Interventions aimed at reducing individual and community-level forms of stigma may be needed to improve the lives of PLHIV and fully realize the promise of test-and-treat strategies.
HIV 相关耻辱感是阻碍 HIV 检测和参与治疗的一个常见因素。深入了解 HIV 相关耻辱感对于制定减少耻辱感的干预措施至关重要,这些干预措施可以优化与 HIV 相关的结果。本定性研究在一项大型 HIV 检测和治疗试验(SEARCH,NCT: 01864603)的基线年度,在东非的八个社区中记录了 HIV 相关耻辱感,这些社区在实施广泛的社区 HIV 检测活动以及努力将 HIV 感染者与护理和治疗联系起来之前。研究结果显示,经历了实施、内化和预期的耻辱感,这些耻辱感具有明显的性别特征,在 HIV 流行率较低的社区更为明显;女性普遍持有并成为对 HIV 持歧视态度的目标。过去实施耻辱感的经历包括隔离行为、言语歧视、身体暴力、羞辱和拒绝。女性的叙述特别揭示了严重的内化耻辱感,包括无价值感、羞耻感、尴尬感,这些导致焦虑和抑郁,包括少数女性的自杀意念。预期的耻辱感包括对婚姻破裂、言语和身体虐待、流言蜚语和公开嘲笑的恐惧。对那些有内化耻辱感并曾遭受伴侣实施耻辱感的女性来说,预期的耻辱感尤其突出。预期的耻辱感导致了护理回避、在偏远设施寻求护理,以及隐藏 HIV 药物。可能需要针对个人和社区层面的耻辱感形式采取干预措施,以改善 HIV 感染者的生活,并充分实现检测和治疗策略的承诺。