A Comparison of COVID-19 Stigma and AIDS Stigma During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross-Sectional Study in China

To understand the current situation of stigmatizing attitudes toward Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China and compare it with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Convenient sampling and vignette-based methods were used to recruit participants on WeChat. A demographic form and adopted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in psychiatry 2021-12, Vol.12, p.782501-782501
Hauptverfasser: Li, Manyun, Long, Jiang, Wang, Xuyi, Liao, Yanhui, Liu, Yueheng, Hao, Yuzhu, Wu, Qiuxia, Zhou, Yanan, Wang, Yingying, Wang, Yunfei, Wang, Qianjin, Ma, Yuejiao, Chen, Shubao, Liu, Tieqiao
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container_title Frontiers in psychiatry
container_volume 12
creator Li, Manyun
Long, Jiang
Wang, Xuyi
Liao, Yanhui
Liu, Yueheng
Hao, Yuzhu
Wu, Qiuxia
Zhou, Yanan
Wang, Yingying
Wang, Yunfei
Wang, Qianjin
Ma, Yuejiao
Chen, Shubao
Liu, Tieqiao
description To understand the current situation of stigmatizing attitudes toward Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China and compare it with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Convenient sampling and vignette-based methods were used to recruit participants on WeChat. A demographic form and adopted stigma scale were used to collect participants' demographic information and stigmatizing attitudes toward COVID-19 and AIDS. A total of 13,994 questionnaires were included in this study. A high portion of participants tend to avoid contact with individuals affected with COVID-19 (74.3%) or AIDS (59.0%), as well as their family members (70.4% for COVID-19 and 47.9% for AIDS). About half of the participants agreed that affected persons could not only cause problems to their own family but also have adverse effects on others (59.6% and 55.6% for COVID-19, 56.9 and 47.0% for AIDS). The agreements with statements about perceived stigma were similar but slightly higher than those about personal stigma in both COVID-19 and AIDS. Participants' agreements with all statements regarding personal and perceived stigma attitudes between COVID-19 and AIDS were all statistically significant ( < 0.001). Participants obtained COVID-19-related information mainly from social media (91.3%) and newspaper or television (77.1%) during the epidemic, and 61.0% of them thought information from newspapers or television was the most reliable. Several similarities and differences of people's attitude toward COVID-19 and AIDS were found. Avoidance, blame, and secondary discrimination to diagnosed persons and their surrounding persons were the main representations of COVID-19-related stigma. Stigma of COVID-19 had less moral link but more public panic. Experience from HIV-related stigma reduction and prevention can be applied to reduce COVID-19-related stigma.
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Participants' agreements with all statements regarding personal and perceived stigma attitudes between COVID-19 and AIDS were all statistically significant ( &lt; 0.001). Participants obtained COVID-19-related information mainly from social media (91.3%) and newspaper or television (77.1%) during the epidemic, and 61.0% of them thought information from newspapers or television was the most reliable. Several similarities and differences of people's attitude toward COVID-19 and AIDS were found. Avoidance, blame, and secondary discrimination to diagnosed persons and their surrounding persons were the main representations of COVID-19-related stigma. Stigma of COVID-19 had less moral link but more public panic. 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source Open Access: DOAJ - Directory of Open Access Journals; PubMed Central; EZB Electronic Journals Library; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects AIDS
COVID-19
physical avoidance
Psychiatry
public panic
stigma
title A Comparison of COVID-19 Stigma and AIDS Stigma During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross-Sectional Study in China
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