Fight AIDS
Not People With AIDS! www.AIDSstigma.net |
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HIV/AIDS-related stigma (or, more simply, HIV stigma) refers to prejudice, discounting, discrediting, and discrimination directed at people perceived to have AIDS or HIV, and the individuals, groups, and communities with which they are associated.
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HIV stigma is expressed around the world in a variety of ways, including:
HIV stigma is effectively universal, but its form varies from one country to another, and the specific groups targeted for AIDS stigma vary considerably.
Whatever its form, HIV stigma inflicts suffering on people and interferes with
attempts to fight the AIDS epidemic.
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Stigma and psychological distress in people with HIV/AIDS.
A study of the links between experiencing HIV stigma and psychological well-being in people with HIV, published in 2013 in Basic and Applied Social Psychology.
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Stigma, Social Risk, and Health Policy: Public Attitudes Toward HIV Surveillance Policies and the Social Construction of Illness.
A detailed report on findings from the study that was published in the September 2003 issue of Health Psychology.
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HIV-Related Stigma and Knowledge in the United States:
Prevalence and Trends, 1991-1999.
Detailed information about findings from the study that was published in the March 2002 issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
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Download the AIDS stigma items from Dr. Herek's 1999 national survey.
(Requires Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded
free of charge).
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The AIDS stigma items from Dr. Herek's 1991 national survey (first reported in the American Journal of Public Health in 1993) are also available.
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Download AIDS and Stigma: A Conceptual Framework and Research Agenda, the final report from a research workshop on AIDS and stigma,
sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health.
(Requires Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded
free of charge).
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Download AIDS stigma and sexual prejudice, a preprint of a paper published in the American Behavioral Scientist (1999, volume 42, #7).
An analysis of national survey data revealed that: (1)
most American adults still associate AIDS mainly with homosexuality or bisexuality, and this association is correlated with higher levels of sexual prejudice (antigay attitudes); (2) all people who contract AIDS sexually are assigned blame for their infection, but such blame is greater for a gay or bisexual man than for a heterosexual man or woman; (3) a sizable minority of the public equates all male-male sexual behavior with AIDS, even sex between two uninfected men; and (4) misconceptions about HIV transmission are correlated with sexual prejudice.
(Requires Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded free of charge). |
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Selected abstracts of Dr. Herek's papers on AIDS stigma.
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AIDS Education |
Download a pre-publication copy of AIDS educational videos for gay and bisexual men:
A content analysis.
(Requires Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded
free of charge).
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Cultural Sensitivity in AIDS Videos for African American Audiences,
a study by Dr. Herek and his colleagues that addresses the importance of using culturally
sensitive educational materials in HIV-related interventions with racial and ethnic minority groups.
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Download a pre-publication copy of Culturally Sensitive AIDS Educational Videos for African American Audiences.
(Requires Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded
free of charge).
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All original content of this website is copyright © 1997-2012 by Gregory M. Herek, Ph.D.
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