Publication | Closed Access
HIV Prevention for Black Women: Structural Barriers and Opportunities
67
Citations
11
References
2008
Year
Health Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial SciencesBlack ChurchGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenPublic HealthVulnerable Patient PopulationBlack Feminist TheoryIntersectionalityHealth EquityBlack Canadian WomenSexual HealthBlack Women’s StudiesTreatment And PreventionBlack FeminismCommunity Health SciencesSocial EpidemiologyMedicineHealth DisparityWomen's Health
Black women bear a disproportionate burden of HIV/AIDS in North America. The purpose of this investigation was to explore Black Canadian women's perspectives on HIV risk and prevention. Four 90-minute focus groups (n=26) and six key informant interviews were conducted in Toronto with Black women of African and Caribbean descent and low socioeconomic status. Data analysis revealed a number of potent barriers to existing HIV preventive interventions: stigma, cultural disconnections, lack of engagement of Black religious institutions, and multiple intersecting forms of discrimination. Recommended HIV prevention opportunities included the Black church, mainstreaming, health care providers, and ethno-specific agencies. HIV prevention strategies for North American Black women, rather than focusing on HIV and individual risk behaviors, may benefit from a primary focus on social and structural factors (e.g., promoting gender equality, economic opportunity, women-controlled prevention technologies and combating racism in health care) thereby integrating HIV prevention into the larger context of community health and survival.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1