Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2022 Jul;25 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):e25913. doi: 10.1002/jia2.25913.
Women living with HIV across global contexts are disproportionately impacted by food insecurity and housing insecurity. Food and housing insecurity are resource insecurities associated with poorer health outcomes among people living with HIV. Poverty, a deeply stigmatized phenomenon, is a contributing factor towards food and housing insecurity. HIV-related stigma-the devaluation, mistreatment and constrained access to power and opportunities experienced by people living with HIV-intersects with structural inequities. Few studies, however, have examined food and housing insecurity as drivers of HIV-related stigma. This study aimed to estimate the associations between food and housing insecurity with HIV-related stigma among women living with HIV in Canada.
This prospective cohort study of women living with HIV (≥16 years old) in three provinces in Canada involved three waves of surveys collected at 18-month intervals between 2013 and 2018. To understand associations between food and housing security and HIV-related stigma, we conducted linear mixed effects regression models. We adjusted for socio-demographic characteristics associated with HIV-related stigma.
Among participants (n = 1422), more than one-third (n = 509; 36%) reported baseline food insecurity and approximately one-tenth (n = 152, 11%) housing insecurity. Mean HIV-related stigma scores were consistent across waves 1 (mean [M] = 57.2, standard deviation [SD] = 20.0, N = 1401) and 2 (M = 57.4, SD = 19.0, N = 1227) but lower at wave 3 (M = 52.8, SD = 18.7, N = 918). On average, across time, food insecure participants reported HIV-related stigma scores that were 8.6 points higher (95% confidence interval [CI]: 6.4, 10.8) compared with food secure individuals. Similarly, participants reporting insecure housing at wave 1 tended to experience greater HIV-related stigma (6.2 points, 95% CI: 2.7, 9.6) over time compared to stably housed participants. There was an interaction between time and housing insecurity, whereby baseline housing insecurity was no longer associated with higher HIV-related stigma at the third wave.
Among women living with HIV in Canada, experiencing food and housing insecurity was associated with consistently higher levels of HIV-related stigma. In addition to the urgent need to tackle food and housing insecurity among people living with HIV to optimize wellbeing, getting to the heart of HIV-related stigma requires identifying and dismantling resource insecurity-related stigma drivers.
在全球范围内,感染艾滋病毒的女性在粮食不安全和住房不安全方面受到不成比例的影响。粮食和住房不安全是与艾滋病毒感染者健康状况较差相关的资源不安全问题。贫困是一种根深蒂固的耻辱现象,是造成粮食和住房不安全的一个因素。艾滋病毒相关耻辱感——艾滋病毒感染者所经历的贬值、虐待和受限获得权力和机会——与结构性不平等交织在一起。然而,很少有研究探讨粮食和住房不安全作为艾滋病毒相关耻辱感的驱动因素。本研究旨在估计加拿大感染艾滋病毒的女性中粮食和住房不安全与艾滋病毒相关耻辱感之间的关联。
这项针对加拿大三个省份中感染艾滋病毒(≥16 岁)的女性的前瞻性队列研究包括在 2013 年至 2018 年期间每 18 个月进行三次调查。为了了解粮食和住房安全与艾滋病毒相关耻辱感之间的关联,我们进行了线性混合效应回归模型。我们调整了与艾滋病毒相关耻辱感相关的社会人口特征。
在参与者中(n=1422),超过三分之一(n=509;36%)报告了基线粮食不安全,约十分之一(n=152,11%)报告了住房不安全。第 1 波(M=57.2,标准差[SD]=20.0,N=1401)和第 2 波(M=57.4,SD=19.0,N=1227)的平均艾滋病毒相关耻辱感评分一致,但第 3 波的评分较低(M=52.8,SD=18.7,N=918)。平均而言,在整个时间内,粮食不安全的参与者报告的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感评分比粮食安全的参与者高 8.6 分(95%置信区间:6.4,10.8)。同样,在第 1 波报告住房不安全的参与者在整个研究过程中经历的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感更高(6.2 分,95%置信区间:2.7,9.6),与住房稳定的参与者相比。住房不安全与时间之间存在交互作用,即在第三波时,基线住房不安全不再与更高的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感相关。
在加拿大感染艾滋病毒的女性中,经历粮食和住房不安全与持续较高的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感相关。除了迫切需要解决艾滋病毒感染者的粮食和住房不安全问题以优化福祉外,解决艾滋病毒相关耻辱感的核心问题还需要确定和消除与资源不安全相关的耻辱感驱动因素。