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Stigma and Discrimination Related to HIVAIDS

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Define and identify HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination ... an attribute that is seen as deeply discrediting to a person or group (Goffmann) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stigma and Discrimination Related to HIVAIDS


1
Stigma and Discrimination Related to HIV/AIDS
  • Dr KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI
  • Dr S.K. CHATURVEDI

2
Lesson Objectives
  • Define and identify HIV/AIDS-related stigma and
    discrimination
  • Better understand international and national
    human right issues
  • Clarify personal values and attitudes with regard
    to HIV/AIDS prevention and care
  • Know how to address stigma and discrimination in
    the context of providing HIV services

3
Definition
  • The Microsoft Word Dictionary defines stigma as
    the shame or disgrace attached to something
    regarded as socially unacceptable. Sociologists
    have taken this a bit further. In a seminal study
    on stigma in 1963, stigma was defined as an
    attribute that is seen as deeply discrediting to
    a person or group (Goffmann). Those attributes
    could be an illness, physical deformity, aberrant
    behaviour or social group (based upon religion or
    ethnicity, etc.). Stigma lets people or groups
    see differences or "others" in a negative light
    while confirming their own sense of normalcy and
    decency.
  • Subsequent researchers have viewed this more as a
    social process that creates or perpetuates social
    inequities and which is used to legitimise
    discrimination. While this is generally true,
    stigma can also be a primal human response-
    particularly in the case of fearing a disease
    that is transmissible and potentially incurable.

4
Stigma and discrimination
  • Stigma refers to unfavourable attitudes and
    beliefs directed toward someone or something
  • Discrimination is the treatment of an individual
    or group with partiality or prejudice
  • Stigmatization reflects an attitude
  • Discrimination is an act or behavior

5
Root Causes
  • 1.The role of knowledge about HIV and AIDS and
    fear surrounding it
  • Ogden and Nyblade believe that the fear of
    transmission from casual transmission, and the
    various "what if scenarios" are the result of 1)
    the lack of specific, in-depth information about
    HIV transmission, 2) fear-based public messaging,
    and 3) the evolving nature of knowledge about HIV
    and AIDS.
  • 2.The role of values, norms, and moral judgment
  • This stigma is exacerbated by the seriousness of
    the illness, its mysterious nature, and its
    association with behaviours that are either
    illegal or socially sensitive (e.g., sex,
    prostitution, and drug use). Also relevant is the
    perception that HIV infection is the product of
    personal choice that one chooses to engage in
    "bad" behaviours that put one at risk and so it
    is "one's own fault" if HIV infection ensues."

6
Expressions and forms of stigma
  • Ogden and Nyblade divide stigma into four loosely
    defined groups physical, social, verbal and
    institutional.
  • Social stigma
  • Isolated from community
  • Voyeurism any interest may be morbid curiosity
    or mockery rather than genuine concern
  • Loss of social role/identity social death,
    loss of standing and respect
  • Physical stigma
  • Isolated, shunned, abandoned
  • Separate living space, eating utensils
  • Violence

7
Forms of stigma (contd.)
  • Verbal stigma
  • Gossip, taunting, scolding
  • Labelling in Africa "moving skeleton," "walking
    corpse," and "keys to the mortuary." In Vietnam
    "social evils," and "scum of society."
  • Institutionalised stigma
  • Barred from jobs, scholarships, visas
  • Denial of health services
  • Police harrassment (eg of sex workers,
    HIV-positive actvists in China, outreach workers
    in India)

8
Challenge
  • HIV-related stigma is increasingly recognized as
    the single greatest challenge to slowing the
    spread of HIV/AIDS
  • HIV/AIDS a threefold epidemic
  • HIV
  • AIDS
  • Stigma, discrimination, and denial

9
Human rights
  • Freedom from discrimination is a fundamental
    human right
  • Discrimination on the basis of HIV/AIDS status,
    actual or presumed, is prohibited by existing
    human rights standards
  • Discrimination against persons living with
    HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), or those thought to be
    infected, is a clear human rights violation

10
Effects of stigma
  • Social isolation
  • Limited rights and reduced access to services
  • HIV/AIDS related stigma fuels new HIV infections
  • Secondary stigma (stigma by association)

11
Stigma in service delivery
  • Discourages access to ANC services
  • Prevents access to counselling , HIV testing and
    MTCT services
  • Discourages disclosure of HIV test results to
    partner(s)
  • Discourages acceptance of MTCT interventions
  • Inhibits use of safer infant-feeding practices
  • Confers secondary stigmatisation on the child

12
Addressing stigma
  • Interventions addressing HIV-related stigma can
    take place at all levels
  • National
  • Community and social/cultural
  • MTCT site/facility
  • Individual

13
National Level Interventions to Address Stigma
  • Support
  • Human rights legislation
  • National efforts to scale up ARV treatment
  • Funding for PPTCT services, and training
  • Share
  • MTCT success stories

14
Community Level Interventions
  • In the community, promote
  • HIV awareness and knowledge
  • MTCT activities as integral to health care and
    HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment
  • Referrals to and from MTCT services
  • Awareness of MTCT interventions

15
Community level interventions (contd.)
  • Support
  • Partnership with schools, social and community
    organizations
  • PLWHA ( people living with HIV/AIDS) in
    implementing initiatives
  • Networking with needed linkages
  • Ongoing training

16
Programme level interventions
  • Integrate MTCT into antenatal services
  • Encourage partner involvement
  • Enlist partner and family support to decrease HIV
    transmission

17
Addressing stigma
  • Educate and train healthcare providers in
  • HIV transmission
  • Activities to address stigma
  • Awareness of language that describes PLWHA
  • MTCT-related policies
  • Counselling and safer infant feeding practices

18
Addressing stigma
  • Enlist managers help to ensure policies and
  • procedures are in place and implemented for
  • Non-discrimination policies
  • Confidentiality
  • Universal precautions
  • Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP)

19
Summary
  • Stigmatisation reflects an attitude
  • Discrimination is an act or behaviour
  • Stigma and discrimination are often linked to
    violations of human rights
  • Human rights declarations affirm all peoples
    rights to be free from
    discrimination, including discrimination based
    on HIV/AIDS status.
  • HIV/AIDS-related stigmatisation and
    discrimination can discourage access to key HIV
    services, including
  • Testing
  • MTCT services
  • Antenatal care
  • ARV prophylaxis

20
Summary contd
  • Stigma discourages
  • -Disclosure of HIV status
  • -Acceptance of safer infant-feeding practices
  • -Access to education, counselling, and treatment
    even when such services are available and
    affordable
  • The MTCT programs and staff can help reduce
    stigma and discrimination in the healthcare
    setting, in the community, and at the national
    level
  • Encourage MTCT staff to serve as role models
  • Involve PLWHA
  • Promote partner participation and community
    support
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