Caiola Courtney, Choufani Marianne R, André Juliette, Sommer Sadie B, Schoemann Alexander M, Bass Sarah B, Barroso Julie
College of Nursing, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858, USA.
School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 62374, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2024 Nov 27;21(12):1575. doi: 10.3390/ijerph21121575.
HIV care engagement and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence interventions aimed at decreasing viral suppression disparities for women living with HIV (WLWH) in the Southern United States (i.e., the South) are few and seldom consider diverse social locations. These refer broadly and dynamically to contextual factors and the position people occupy in a social hierarchy based on intersecting systems of oppression and social determinants of health like gender, race/ethnic, and class inequities; geographic location; and HIV-related stigma. Using an intersectional approach, we conducted in-depth interviews and used a phased approach to directed content analysis to describe women's perceptions of their social location and how it impacts their decision-making about HIV care engagement and ART adherence. Participants were recruited to participate from a broad geographic area and represented the diverse social locations occupied by WLWH in the South. Findings from 40 in-depth interviews include descriptions of how geographic context impacts HIV care engagement and medication adherence through access to care, quality of care, and the place-based context of day-to-day experiences of living with HIV. Participants spoke of multilevel power relationships based on their gender and racial identities, and how social determinants and intersecting identities occur simultaneously and vary as a function of one another to impact health and HIV care decision-making. The findings offer a nuanced understanding of how WLWH perceive their contextually specific social locations and make critical decisions about their HIV care engagement and medication adherence.
针对美国南部感染艾滋病毒的女性(WLWH)减少病毒抑制差异的艾滋病毒护理参与和抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)依从性干预措施很少,而且很少考虑不同的社会位置。这些广义且动态地指情境因素以及人们在社会等级制度中基于交叉的压迫系统和健康的社会决定因素(如性别、种族/族裔和阶级不平等;地理位置;以及与艾滋病毒相关的耻辱感)所占据的位置。我们采用交叉性方法,进行了深入访谈,并采用分阶段方法进行定向内容分析,以描述女性对其社会位置的认知以及这如何影响她们关于艾滋病毒护理参与和ART依从性的决策。参与者从广泛的地理区域招募而来,代表了美国南部WLWH所占据的不同社会位置。40次深入访谈的结果包括对地理环境如何通过获得护理、护理质量以及感染艾滋病毒的日常经历的基于地点的背景来影响艾滋病毒护理参与和药物依从性的描述。参与者谈到了基于其性别和种族身份的多层次权力关系,以及社会决定因素和交叉身份如何同时出现并相互作用,以影响健康和艾滋病毒护理决策。这些发现为理解WLWH如何看待其特定情境下的社会位置以及就其艾滋病毒护理参与和药物依从性做出关键决策提供了细致入微的认识。