The political context of AIDS-related stigma and knowledge in a South African township community

The purpose of this study was to examine the presentation of AIDS-related stigma and knowledge within the political context of the South African government's response to the AIDS epidemic. It was during the 2000 - 2004 period that key government officials publicly challenged the orthodox views...

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Veröffentlicht in:SAHARA J : journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS Research Alliance 2008-07, Vol.5 (2), p.74-82
Hauptverfasser: Forsyth, Brian, Vandormael, Alain, Kershaw, Trace, Grobbelaar, Janis
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Grobbelaar, Janis
description The purpose of this study was to examine the presentation of AIDS-related stigma and knowledge within the political context of the South African government's response to the AIDS epidemic. It was during the 2000 - 2004 period that key government officials publicly challenged the orthodox views of HIV/AIDS, with the South African president, Thabo Mbeki, actively positing the primary role of poverty and other socio-economic stressors in the progression of the AIDS epidemic. This discursive position had real-time effects for AIDS policy-making and ultimately delayed the implementation of a national antiretroviral (ARV) rollout programme. Consequently this position was criticised by commentators in the media and elsewhere for contributing to an already widespread climate of AIDS stigmatisation and misinformation. To shed more light on these claims we conducted a survey in 2005 in Atteridgeville, a South African township, and compared results with those of a similar survey conducted shortly after ARV medications became available in 2004. Results indicated a reduction in AIDS stigma levels across the 1-year period, and that those participants who endorsed contentious political views (such as those expressed by key government officials) were more likely to have a higher level of AIDS-related stigma than those who disagreed. Nevertheless, this study cautions against drawing a causal relationship between the South African government's position and AIDS-stigmatising attitudes, and suggests that further political and social factors be accounted for in an attempt to gain a fuller understanding of this seemingly complex relationship.
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subjects Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - ethnology
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - etiology
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - prevention & control
Adolescent
Adult
AIDS
AIDS debate
AIDS-related stigma
Antiretroviral rollout
Atteridgeville
Attitude to Health - ethnology
Black People - education
Black People - ethnology
Black People - statistics & numerical data
Causality
Debat du SIDA
Denial, Psychological
Deploiement des antiretroviraux
débat du SIDA
déploiement des antirétroviraux
Female
Gouvernement sud-africain
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Policy
HIV
HIV / AIDS
Humans
Knowledge
Local government
Male
Mass Media
Medical treatment
Middle Aged
Multivariate Analysis
National Health Programs - organization & administration
Politics
Poverty
Regression Analysis
Social factors
South Africa
South Africa - epidemiology
South African government
Stereotyping
Stigma
Stigmatisation liee au SIDA
stigmatisation liée au SIDA
Surveys and Questionnaires
Urban Population
VIH / SIDA
title The political context of AIDS-related stigma and knowledge in a South African township community
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