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Stigmatization of AIDS patients : disentangling Thai nursing students' attitudes towards HIV/AIDS, drug use and commercial sex

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Kit Chan, Mark Stoove, L Sringernyuang, Daniel Reidpath
This paper analyzes the interrelationships between the stigma of HIV/AIDS stigma and the co-stigmas of commercial sex (CS) and injecting drug use (IDU). Students of a Bangkok nursing college (N = 144) were presented with vignettes describing a person varying in the disease diagnoses (AIDS, leukemia, no disease) and co-characteristics (IDU, CS, blood transfusion, no co-characteristic). For each vignette, participants completed a social distance measure assessing their attitudes towards the hypothetical person portrayed. Multivariate analyses showed strong interactions between the stigmas of AIDS and IDU but not between AIDS and CS. Although AIDS was shown to be stigmatizing in and of itself, it was significantly less stigmatizing than IDU. The findings highlight the need to consider the non-disease-related stigmas associated with HIV as well as the actual stigma of HIV/AIDS in treatment and care settings. Methodological strengths and limitations were evaluated and implications for future research discussed.

History

Journal

AIDS & behavior

Volume

12

Issue

1

Pagination

1 - 12

Publisher

Springer New York LLC

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

1090-7165

eISSN

1573-3254

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

Copyright notice

2007, Springer Science+Business Media

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