HIV Stigma Rules?
posted: 22/02/2011
You can plainly see HIV stigma and fear in action when eight in ten young people know that HIV cannot be passed on by sharing mugs, yet three quarters of 12 to 18-year-olds say they still wouldn't share a mug with someone with HIV.
That’s HIV stigma and fear.
Even when people know the facts we often let our fears and prejudices rule.
Two new HIV knowledge and attitudes studies
Two recent studies, the first of teenagers in London from the HIV family charity Body and Soul, and the other of adults in the UK from NAT (National AIDS Trust), both show HIV ignorance and prejudice in action – and this seems to be worsening in recent years.
London teens reveal rejection
A recent study of London students aged 12-18 reveals a significant gap between what young people know about HIV and how they would behave towards someone living with HIV. While the majority know how HIV is passed on, many said that, despite this, they would not share a cup, shake hands with, or kiss someone who is living with HIV.
Social stigmas also rule: many young people said they would worry about the emotional strain and hostile reactions from young people around them, if they had a relationship with someone with HIV.
Despite all this, young people are keen to know more. 41 percent felt they had received too little information on HIV, and more than half (54 per cent) said they wanted to learn more about HIV.
Attitudes to HIV among 12-18 year olds in London: Report to Body and Soul
The research highlights the contradiction between what young people knew about HIV and how they said they would behave:
- While 81 per cent of young people knew that HIV could not be transmitted by sharing a cup, only 27 per cent of them went on to say that they would drink from the same cup as someone who they knew was HIV positive.
- Likewise, while 69 per cent of young people knew they could not get HIV by kissing, only 24 per cent of them went on to say they would kiss someone who they knew was HIV positive.
- Even some of the youngest people in the sample - 12 and 13 year olds - said they would not share a cup with, shake hands with or kiss someone who they knew was HIV positive, even if they knew it was not possible to get HIV that way. Crucially, this shows that HIV-related stigma starts at an early age.
Schools are the most important place for students to learn about HIV:
- Young people tended to feel that teachers were the most trustworthy source of information on HIV, suggesting that schools are a good route of communicating with young people on the topic.
- Communication by teachers also appears to have the potential to achieve impact: those who said they had been taught about HIV in school not only had higher levels of knowledge about how HIV is transmitted but also - to some extent - appeared to be less prejudiced towards people with HIV.
- Importantly, almost 1 in 3 of the young people consulted said they had either not been taught about HIV in their school, or did not know if they had.
Attitudes to HIV among 12-18 year olds in London
Rising Adult HIV Ignorance
HIV ignorance among adults seems to be rising, but two out of three adults say more needs doing to tackle HIV hate and prejudice in the UK.
- one in five adults do not know HIV is passed on through sex without a condom between a man and a woman
- Only three in ten adults (30%) can correctly pick from a list all of the ways HIV is and is not transmitted
- Rising numbers wrongly think spitting and biting pass on HIV
- 1 in 5 say someone in their family getting HIV would damage their relationship with them
- More than two thirds of British adults (68%) agree more needs to be done to tackle prejudice against people living with HIV in Britain.
NAT (National AIDS Trust) has just published the findings from its fourth HIV public opinion poll HIV: Public Knowledge and Attitudes 2010, carried out by the opinion polling organisation Ipsos MORI, amongst adults in Britain.
The report reveals a worrying rise in HIV ignorance over the past ten years.
Dispelling the transmission myths and misconceptions
The British public is confused about how HIV can be passed on. One in five people weren’t clear that sex without a condom between a man and a woman, or between two men are ways of getting, or passing on HIV. Public HIV knowledge seems to be falling, because around 1 in 10 more people knew this ten years ago.
Only three in ten people (30%) correctly picked all the ways HIV can and cannot be passed on.
One in 10 people believe the impossible – that spitting or kissing passes on HIV. This result is twice as bad as ten years before.
One in six people (17%) don’t feel they know enough about how to prevent HIV transmission during sex.
African and Carribbean people need more
Many African and Caribbean communities know less about HIV because they shy away from discussing it. The NAT survey shows that people from ethnic minorities are more likely than white people to say they 'don't know' the routes of HIV transmission.
In addition Asian and particularly African and Caribbean people 'are also likely not to mention sex without a condom between two men as a method of transmission.'
In the survey, 46 percent of African and Caribbean people polled did not mention sex between two men compared with 20 percent of whites.
Life with HIV
Encouragingly, most adults (70%) know people getting HIV won’t all die within three years, but 1 in 10 do think this. Two out of five wrongly believe that HIV test results aren't reliable until three months after HIV infection, and nearly half wrongly think pregnant mothers with HIV will always have babies with HIV.
People need a better grasp of the facts because knowledge curbs HIV fears that can discourage people from taking HIV tests and telling others about having HIV. More than two out of five adults want to know more about life with HIV here today, and more than half of all young people under 25 want to know about HIV life.
Deborah Jack, Chief Executive of NAT (National AIDS Trust), told us:
‘As the number of people with HIV in the UK approaches 100,000, it is crucial for everyone to understand the facts around how HIV is passed on so they can protect themselves and others. Many people are unaware of the basics such as using a condom to protect themselves, whilst myths such as transmission from kissing and spitting are still perpetuated.
‘One of the most concerning aspects of this survey is the fact that knowledge of HIV transmission amongst the general public has declined significantly over the last ten years. With the number of HIV infections in the UK still going up, one in six people feeling they do not know enough about how to prevent HIV transmission during sex is simply too high. When it comes to protecting yourself from HIV infection, knowledge is power.
'The Government must take the lead in acting to improve understanding and so protect public health.’
Support or stigma and prejudice?
Most of the public have a supportive attitude, with two thirds (67%) saying they have sympathy for people with HIV and three quarters (74%) agreeing people with HIV deserve the same level of support and respect as people with cancer.
However, a significant minority of people continue to hold stigmatising and discriminatory views.
One in ten adults say they have little sympathy towards people with HIV, and this rises to three in ten if people got HIV through unprotected sex. Since almost everyone with HIV (95%) got HIV through unprotected sex, this rate of public blame and rejection looks worrying.
Friends, workers and relations
Feelings are affected by people having HIV. One in five people felt HIV would damage their relationship with a HIV positive family member or neighbour. At work, although two thirds agree they would be comfortable working with someone living with HIV, more than one in ten admitted they would be uncomfortable working with that person.
‘Tell the workers too’
Over a third of people think employers should tell other workers that one of them has HIV. The idea that workers have a ‘right to know’ is pointless as protection, because there is no risk of HIV transmission at work. This 'right to know' demand shows how HIV stigma undermines HIV workers’ rights to privacy and confidentiality.
Most know about HIV stigma
Two thirds of the public believe that there is still a great deal of stigma in the UK today around HIV and a similar proportion agree it is right there are laws to protect people with HIV from discrimination and that more needs to be done to tackle prejudice against people living with HIV in the UK.
Women are keener than men to tackle HIV prejudice, with 73% of women wanting to see action on this problem, compared with 62% of the men.
Time for government action
Deborah Jack, Chief Executive of NAT (National AIDS Trust), concludes:
‘Whilst HIV treatment has advanced rapidly in the last ten years, knowledge and attitudes have sadly not kept pace – resulting in stigma and discrimination.
'In addition to improving knowledge of HIV, intensive work also needs to go into tackling the often deep-seated judgments and beliefs held about HIV and the people affected.
'The Government made a concerted and effective effort to tackle this stigma in mental health, and now it is time for HIV to be addressed in the same way.’
HIV - Public Knowledge and Attitudes 2011 - full report and data tables
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Diagnosed in 1984
posted: 07/02/2011
Jonathan Grimshaw was one for the first people diagnosed with HIV in the UK, helping set up Body Positive and the Landmark in London. This Sunday he was the subject of a two page feature in The Observer.
By the beginning of 1987, Jonathan Grimshaw was the UK's most visible HIV-positive man. He looked striking: he was 32, bald and he often wore a bow-tie. He spoke eloquently about a terrible disease, something he'd been diagnosed with soon after the tests became available in February 1984.
With no specific treatments, his prognosis was not good, but he believed his best chances of survival lay within the realms of activism, honesty and education.
So he wasn't at all surprised one day to be seated on a sofa for an explicit live television programme with Claire Rayner. It was the first National Aids Week.
Read Jonathan's story here.
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Body Positive Blackpool Saved
posted: 05/10/2010
Body Positive in Blackpool has been saved by two local councillors who donated £6,500. Body Positive in Blackpool feared it would only survive until next year after it discovered its employee Bianca Campbell had stolen £4,127 using its bank card to buy things for her own botox company, Fresh Face.
Redundancies and cuts
As a result of Campbell's theft and a £15,000 cut in local authority funding, Body Positive Blackpool made two staff redundant and cut its services. But last week the charity was giving a reprieve after Labour councillors Simon Blackburn and Gary Coleman donated £6,500 to keep the charity running.
Bianca Campbell, who was sacked in March when her theft was discovered, pleaded guilty to fraud at Preston Crown Court.
The court heard Campbell used a Body Positive Blackpool bankcard to order products for her own business. Campbell was given a total of six months prison, suspended for a year, with 12 months supervision.
Body Positive Blackpool
Source
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HIV Information on Tour
posted: 17/05/2010
UPDATED 20 MAY - LEEDS and NEWCASTLE DATES CORRECTED
HIV and Your Body is the theme for free workshops for people living with HIV. Find out more about HIV and your Heart, Kidneys, Bones, Liver, and Body Shape.
Robert Fieldhouse, the editor of Baseline, is running a series of talks in the North-West, Midlands, West Yorkshire and North East of England.
Blackburn with THRIVINE at Jarman Centre 53 James Street, Blackburn, Lancashire BB1 6BE
contact James 01254 263 525
Saturday 22 May 2pm HIV and your Bones
Tuesday 17 August 6pm Choice of HIV and Your …. Heart, Kidneys, Liver, and Body Shape
Manchester at Black Health Agency (BHA) 464 Chester Road, Manchester M16 9HE
Monday 5 July 1pm HIV and your Kidneys
Monday 6 September 1pm Choice of HIV and Your …. Heart, Bones, Liver, and Body Shape
contact BHA 0845 450 4247
Birmingham at ABPLus 29-30 Lower Essex Street, Birmingham, B5 6SN
Tuesday 13 July 7pm HIV and your Liver
Tuesday 10 August 7pm Choice of HIV and Your …. Heart, Kidneys, Bones, and Body Shape
Leeds at Skyline 4th floor Gallery House, The Headrow, Leeds, LS1
CORRECTED DATES
Thursday 8 JULY 6pm HIV and your Body Shape
Thursday 5 August 6pm Choice of HIV and Your …. Heart, Kidneys, Bones, and Liver
Newcastle upon Tyne at Body Positive North East 12 Upper Princess Square, Newcastle, NE1 0191 232 2855
Wednesday 7 JULY 3.30pm HIV and your Heart
Wednesday 4 AUGUST 3.30pm Choice of HIV and Your …. Heart, Kidneys, Bones, and Liver
The Leeds and Newcastle dates on the postcard with detilas of this talks tour are incorrect. Robert has told us the corrected dates above.
Further details from the speaker Robert Fieldhouse 07886 159 735 or by email
These talks are all funded by the drugs company Gilead Sciences
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