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A method for the quantitative analysis of the layering of HIV-related stigma
journal contribution
posted on 2005-05-01, 00:00 authored by Daniel Reidpath, Kit ChanHIV-related stigma is regarded as one of the major barriers in the development of effective prevention and care programs; but the stigma associated with HIV stigma is not a singular entity. The stigma of the infection is layered with other stigmas, such as those associated with the routes of transmission (e.g., sex work and injecting drug use) and personal characteristics (e.g., race, religion, ethnicity and gender). In developing programs and policies to overcome HIV-related stigma, cognisance needs to be taken of all the sources of stigma, and how they may interact. A novel method is described for examining the layers of HIV/AIDS-related stigma, and secondary data are adapted to illustrate this. The importance of understanding the layering of stigma for the development of effective interventions is also discussed.
History
Journal
AIDS careVolume
17Issue
4Pagination
425 - 432Publisher
RoutledgeLocation
London, EnglandPublisher DOI
ISSN
0954-0121eISSN
1360-0451Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2005, Taylor & Francis Group LtdUsage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
AIDS & HIVAIDS & HIV infectionallied healthbehavioral medicinechild & adolescent psychiatry & clinical psychologycounselingcounselling - social workethics & legal issues in mental healthHIV & AIDS counselinghealth psychologyinfectious diseasesmedical sociologypsychiatry & clinical psychology - adultpublic health - medical sociologyrisksocial policy