Laher Fatima, Mahlangu Naledi, Sibiya Mbalenhle
Perinatal HIV Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
South Afr J HIV Med. 2025 Jan 30;26(1):1644. doi: 10.4102/sajhivmed.v26i1.1644. eCollection 2025.
Rare cases of HIV cure exist. Clinical trials of HIV cure are also underway. However, little is documented about how potential cures are perceived by African people living with HIV, although they are key stakeholders.
We explored knowledge, beliefs, and experiences about HIV cure in Soweto, South Africa.
We conducted qualitative research with five stratified focus groups ( = 49). Consenting adults living with HIV were eligible. Facilitators asked participants about their knowledge of HIV cure, experience of purported cures, and beliefs about cure possibilities. Transcripts from audio recordings were thematically analysed.
Participants had knowledge of the concept of cure as eradication, not remission. Three main themes emerged about possible HIV cures. Firstly, hope and scepticism: people feared unequal access to technologies. Secondly, cultural and conventional approaches: there were beliefs in traditional healers, scepticism towards culturally purported cures (e.g. herbal tonic), and a desire for medical cures to obviate pill burdens. Thirdly, anticipated socio-behavioural effects: beliefs existed that cures might improve happiness, reduce emotional burdens of disclosure, facilitate HIV-free generations, increase risk behaviours, and reduce health checks, but not change societal attitudes to HIV.
In Soweto, South Africa, people living with HIV hope for medical technologies - such as cure and long-acting treatments - to relieve the biopsychosocial burdens of chronic treatment. Despite treatment knowledge, some people try culturally purported cures for HIV. In HIV cure trials, consent language should avoid 'cure' when remission is meant. Care should address pill burden, and counselling should address sex, substances, exercise, and nutrition.
存在罕见的艾滋病治愈案例。艾滋病治愈的临床试验也正在进行。然而,关于感染艾滋病毒的非洲人如何看待潜在的治愈方法,虽然他们是关键利益相关者,但记录甚少。
我们在南非索韦托探索了关于艾滋病治愈的知识、信念和经历。
我们对五个分层焦点小组(n = 49)进行了定性研究。同意参与的成年艾滋病毒感染者符合条件。主持人询问参与者关于他们对艾滋病治愈的了解、所谓治愈经历以及对治愈可能性的信念。对录音的文字记录进行了主题分析。
参与者了解治愈的概念是根除,而非缓解。关于可能的艾滋病治愈方法出现了三个主要主题。首先,希望与怀疑:人们担心获得技术的机会不平等。其次,文化和传统方法:人们相信传统治疗师,对文化上所谓的治愈方法(如草药滋补品)持怀疑态度,并且渴望通过医学治愈来消除服药负担。第三,预期的社会行为影响:人们认为治愈可能会改善幸福感、减轻披露的情感负担、促进无艾滋病毒的一代、增加危险行为并减少健康检查,但不会改变社会对艾滋病毒的态度。
在南非索韦托地区,艾滋病毒感染者希望有医学技术——如治愈方法和长效治疗——来减轻长期治疗的生物心理社会负担。尽管有治疗知识,但一些人仍尝试文化上所谓的艾滋病治愈方法。在艾滋病治愈试验中,当指的是缓解时,同意书语言应避免使用“治愈”一词。护理应解决服药负担问题,咨询应涉及性、药物、运动和营养。