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Temporal and cross-national comparisons of young Africans’ HIV-related narratives from five countries 1997–2014

机译:1997-2014年来自五个国家的非洲年轻人与艾滋病相关的叙述的时间和跨国比较

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摘要

Little is known about how young Africans have made sense of the dramatic ways in which the HIV epidemic has evolved, and how that sense-making varies across countries with different epidemiological and sociocultural profiles. Symbolic representations of HIV and people living with HIV influence prevention, stigma, treatment-seeking, and illness experience. We compared social representations of HIV among young people from Senegal, Burkina Faso, Nigeria (South-East), Kenya, and Swaziland between 1997 and 2014. From a pool of 32,759 HIV-themed creative narratives contributed by 10–24 year-olds to scriptwriting competitions at eight time points (1997, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2011, 2013, and 2014), we randomly sampled 1937 narratives, stratified by author's sex, age, and rural/urban residence. We quantified components of each narrative and calculated descriptive statistics and adjusted odds ratios, controlling for year, country, and author demographics. From 2005 onwards, representations of death, treatment access, and hopefulness improved significantly. Representations of death reached their lowest point in 2013, while biomedical treatment and hope peaked in 2011 and 2008, respectively, then declined. Narratives increasingly focused on female protagonists. Nigerian texts had significantly higher odds of death and blame, and lower odds of hope. A focus on life post-infection and representations of support for characters living with HIV increased with country HIV prevalence. Narratives by older authors were less blaming and more hopeful, supportive, and prevention-focused. While aggregate social representations in the narratives from 2005 to 2008-11 reflect increased optimism fostered by access to antiretroviral therapy (ART), positive developments are not sustained at this level. Stigmatizing representations persist, particularly in Nigeria. The hope-promoting and stigma-reducing influence of the advent of ART access may have partially run its course by 2011/2013. However, significant temporal and cross-national differences point to opportunities to reframe HIV in more constructive ways and contribute to improved education, communication, and stigma-reduction efforts.
机译:对于年轻的非洲人如何理解艾滋病毒流行的戏剧性方式,以及在具有不同流行病学和社会文化特征的国家之间,这种意义的理解是如何变化的,人们所知甚少。艾滋病毒和艾滋病毒携带者的象征性表达会影响预防,污名化,寻求治疗和患病经历。我们比较了1997年至2014年期间塞内加尔,布基纳法索,尼日利亚(东南),肯尼亚和斯威士兰的年轻人中艾滋病毒的社会代表性。从32,759名以10-24岁年龄段儿童为创作对象的创意叙事中,在八个时间点(1997年,2000年,2002年,2005年,2008年,2011年,2013年和2014年)的编剧比赛中,我们随机抽取了1937篇叙述文,按作者的性别,年龄和农村/城市居住地分层。我们量化每个叙述的组成部分,并计算描述性统计数据和调整的优势比,控制年份,国家和作者人口统计。从2005年起,死亡人数,获得治疗的机会和充满希望的人数大大增加。死亡人数在2013年达到最低点,而生物医学治疗和希望分别在2011年和2008年达到顶峰,然后下降。叙事越来越集中于女性主角。尼日利亚文本的死亡和受害几率明显更高,而希望的几率更低。随着国家艾滋病毒的流行,对感染后生活的关注以及对艾滋病毒感染者的支持表示越来越多。年长的作家的叙事较少受到指责,而更加充满希望,支持和预防。尽管2005年至2008-11年间叙事中的总体社会代表性反映了获得抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)促进了人们的乐观情绪,但在这一水平上并没有持续的积极发展。污名化的表现持续存在,尤其是在尼日利亚。到2011/2013年,抗逆转录病毒疗法的出现会带来促进希望和减少耻辱感的影响。但是,重大的时间和跨国差异表明,有机会以更具建设性的方式重组艾滋病毒,并有助于改善教育,交流和减少污名化工作。

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