HIV as social and ecological experience

Social Science & Medicine
Brian King, Margaret S Winchester

Abstract

The spread and varied impacts of the HIV/AIDS epidemic demonstrate the complex and reciprocal relationships between the socio-political and biophysical dimensions of human health. Yet even with increasing research and policy attention there remain critical gaps in the literature on how HIV-positive households manage health through their engagement with social and ecological systems. This is particularly urgent given improvements in the global response to the epidemic, whereby expanded access to antiretroviral therapy has extended the possibility for survival for years or decades. Because many HIV-positive families and communities in the Global South remain dependent upon a diverse set of resources to generate income and meet subsistence needs, the impacts of disease must be understood within a mix of social processes, including the maintenance of land and collection of natural resources. Similarly, biophysical systems disrupted by HIV/AIDS vary depending upon resource use and locally-specific dynamics that influence opportunities for agrarian production. This paper reports on the findings from a structured survey completed in three communities in northeast South Africa in 2013 that is integrated with focus group discussions and...Continue Reading

References

Nov 28, 2006·Social Science & Medicine·Winford Masanjala
Sep 6, 2007·Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. Supplement·Deborah PoselLiz Walker
Oct 17, 2008·American Journal of Public Health·Zeida R Kon, Nuha Lackan
Dec 15, 2012·American Journal of Public Health·Anna TalmanJudd L Walson
Mar 26, 2014·Medical Anthropology·Janet W McGrathCharles B Rwabukwali
Dec 1, 2009·African Journal of AIDS Research : AJAR·David A HimmelgreenDaniel Sellen
Mar 9, 2017·Lancet·Emily Mendenhall
Mar 9, 2017·Lancet·Merrill SingerEmily Mendenhall

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