Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/131971
Title: Stigmatization, Discrimination and Illness
Authors: Bohle Franziska ,Leah
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Universitatsverlag Gottingen
Abstract: “She was given her own plate, her own cup, everything of her own, even when she just touched a cloth then nobody wanted to touch it again.” (Halima, HIV-seropositive) The book sheds light on the profound influence of an HIV-seropositive diagnosis on the lives of women and their social environment in the United Republic of Tanzania. The author, a medical doctor and social anthropologist, tells the story of six Tanzanian HIV-seropositive women, focusing on their negotiation and perception of illness and disease. Furthermore, the high levels of discrimination and stigmatization in the context of HIV-seropositivity that they experience are presented in detail, weaving together the impacts of an HIV-seropositive diagnosis with results analyzed both from a Medical Anthropology and Public Health perspective. Despite a new era of antiretroviral treatment, available in Tanzania free of cost, that has given cause for hope in a change in how the disease is perceived, the book impressively underlines that being HIV-seropositive remains a great challenge and heavy burden for women in Tanzania.
link: http://www.oapen.org/record/462270
Keywords: Medicine;HIV;Women;Tanzania;Social Environment;Public Health
ISBN: 9783863951085
Theme:教科書-醫學類

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