Precarity and Hope at the Intersections of HIV and Cervical Cancer in a Johannesburg Clinic.
Jonathan StadlerFiona ScorgiePublished in: Medical anthropology (2024)
In a tragically ironic twist, antiretroviral therapy (ART) that promised an end to AIDS ushered in a syndemic of viral cancers, transforming hope to despair. In this article we draw from the illness narratives of HIV positive women attending a cervical cancer screening clinic in Johannesburg, South Africa, and chart their pathways from HIV to cancer, and their quest for treatment. Our interlocutors described protracted struggles to access surgical procedures to prevent the onset of cervical cancer. Dealt a double blow of HIV and cervical cancer, women's narratives reveal the intersections of exposure to pathogens and the precarity of hope.
Keyphrases
- hiv positive
- antiretroviral therapy
- south africa
- hiv infected
- cervical cancer screening
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected patients
- hiv aids
- men who have sex with men
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- primary care
- sars cov
- papillary thyroid
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- hiv testing
- squamous cell
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- skeletal muscle
- signaling pathway