Combating HIV stigma in low- and middle-income healthcare settings: a scoping review.
M Kumi SmithRichie H XuShanda Lee HuntChongyi WeiJoseph D TuckerWeiming TangDanyang LuoHao XueCheng WangLigang YangBin YangLi LiBenny L JoynerSean Y SylviaPublished in: Journal of the International AIDS Society (2021)
Combating healthcare stigma in LMIC demands interventions that can simultaneously address resource constraints, high HIV burden and more severe stigma. Our findings suggest that this will require more objective, reliable and culturally adaptable stigma measures to facilitate meaningful programme evaluation and comparison across studies. All but one study concluded that their interventions were effective in reducing healthcare stigma. Though encouraging, the fact that most studies measured impact using self-reported measures suggests that social desirability may bias results upwards. Homogeneity of study results also hindered our ability to draw substantive conclusions about potential best practices to guide the design of future stigma reduction programmes.
Keyphrases
- hiv aids
- healthcare
- mental health
- mental illness
- antiretroviral therapy
- social support
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- physical activity
- hiv positive
- hepatitis c virus
- primary care
- depressive symptoms
- hiv testing
- randomized controlled trial
- risk assessment
- social media
- men who have sex with men
- drug induced
- risk factors