Impact of a multicomponent navigation strategy on stigma among people living with HIV and Kaposi's sarcoma in Kenya: a qualitative analysis

Persons with HIV-associated Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) experience three co-existing stigmatizing health conditions: skin disease, HIV, and cancer, which contribute to a complex experience of stigmatization and to delays in diagnosis and treatment. Despite the importance of stigma among these patient...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs 2024-06, Vol.2024 (63), p.38
Hauptverfasser: Collier, Sigrid M, Semeere, Aggrey, Chemtai, Linda, Byakwaga, Helen, Lagat, Celestine, Laker-Oketta, Miriam, Bramante, Juliet, Pacheco, Ann, Zehtab, Morvarid, Strahan, Alexis G, Grant, Merridy, Bogart, Laura M, Bassett, Ingrid V, Busakhala, Naftali, Opakas, Jesse, Maurer, Toby, Martin, Jeffrey, Kiprono, Samson, Freeman, Esther E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Persons with HIV-associated Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) experience three co-existing stigmatizing health conditions: skin disease, HIV, and cancer, which contribute to a complex experience of stigmatization and to delays in diagnosis and treatment. Despite the importance of stigma among these patients, there are few proven stigma-reduction strategies for HIV-associated malignancies. Using qualitative methods, we explore how people with HIV-associated KS in western Kenya between August 2022 and 2023 describe changes in their stigma experience after participation in a multicomponent navigation strategy, which included 1) physical navigation and care coordination, 2) video-based education with motivational survivor stories, 3) travel stipend, 4) health insurance enrollment assistance, 5) health insurance stipend, and 6) peer mentorship. A purposive sample of persons at different stages of chemotherapy treatment were invited to participate. Participants described how a multicomponent navigation strategy contributed to increased knowledge and awareness, a sense of belonging, hope to survive, encouragement, and social support, which served as stigma mitigators, likely counteracting the major drivers of intersectional stigma in HIV-associated KS.
ISSN:1745-6614
1745-6614
DOI:10.1093/jncimonographs/lgae017