Department of Sociology, Drexel University, 3201 Arch Street, Room 288, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2024 Jun 15;21(6):782. doi: 10.3390/ijerph21060782.
This paper examines how African immigrants living with HIV negotiate and reconstruct their productive (i.e., educational and career opportunities), sexual, and reproductive identities. We used data from a mixed-methods study to explore how stigma and social networks in which participants were embedded shaped how they understood and negotiated their role expectations and responsibilities. Participants revealed how HIV not only changed their identities and limited their sex life, partner choices, and fundamental decisions about fertility and reproduction, but also presented them with the opportunity to reinvent/reshape their lives. Our analysis revealed that the cultural discourses about illness and HIV in participant's countries of origin, the acculturative and migratory stressors, and the competing influences and expectations from family and friends in their home and host countries shape their illness experience, and how they adjust to life with HIV. This paper builds on sociological understanding of illness experience as a social construct that shapes the ill person's identity, role, and function in society. Specifically, the paper contributes to discourses on how (i) participants' social location and identity (as transnational migrants adjusting to acculturative stressors associated with resettlement into a new country), (ii) cultural discourses about illness and HIV in their countries of origin, and (iii) embeddedness in transnational social networks influence health outcomes, including lived experiences with chronic illnesses and stigmatized conditions such as HIV.
本文探讨了感染艾滋病毒的非洲移民如何协商和重建他们的生产性(即教育和职业机会)、性和生殖身份。我们使用混合方法研究的数据,探讨了参与者所处的污名化环境和社交网络如何影响他们对角色期望和责任的理解和协商。参与者揭示了艾滋病毒不仅改变了他们的身份,限制了他们的性生活、伴侣选择以及关于生育和生殖的基本决策,还为他们提供了重塑生活的机会。我们的分析表明,参与者原籍国关于疾病和艾滋病毒的文化话语、文化适应和迁移压力,以及来自原籍国和目的国的家庭和朋友的相互竞争的影响和期望,塑造了他们的患病体验,以及他们如何适应艾滋病毒的生活。本文基于社会学对疾病体验的理解,即疾病体验是一种社会建构,塑造了患病者在社会中的身份、角色和功能。具体而言,本文有助于探讨参与者的社会地位和身份(作为适应重新安置到新国家的文化适应压力的跨国移民)、原籍国关于疾病和艾滋病毒的文化话语以及跨国社交网络的嵌入如何影响健康结果,包括慢性疾病和艾滋病毒等污名化疾病的生活体验。