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Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand

INTRODUCTION: HIV stigma and discrimination are major issues affecting people living with HIV in their everyday lives. In Thailand, a project was implemented to address HIV stigma and discrimination within communities with four activities: (1) monthly banking days; (2) HIV campaigns; (3) information...

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Autores principales: Jain, Aparna, Nuankaew, Ratana, Mongkholwiboolphol, Nungruthai, Banpabuth, Arunee, Tuvinun, Rachada, Oranop na Ayuthaya, Pakprim, Richter, Kerry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3833104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24242262
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.3.18711
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author Jain, Aparna
Nuankaew, Ratana
Mongkholwiboolphol, Nungruthai
Banpabuth, Arunee
Tuvinun, Rachada
Oranop na Ayuthaya, Pakprim
Richter, Kerry
author_facet Jain, Aparna
Nuankaew, Ratana
Mongkholwiboolphol, Nungruthai
Banpabuth, Arunee
Tuvinun, Rachada
Oranop na Ayuthaya, Pakprim
Richter, Kerry
author_sort Jain, Aparna
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: HIV stigma and discrimination are major issues affecting people living with HIV in their everyday lives. In Thailand, a project was implemented to address HIV stigma and discrimination within communities with four activities: (1) monthly banking days; (2) HIV campaigns; (3) information, education and communication (IEC) materials and (4) “Funfairs.” This study evaluates the effect of project interventions on reducing community-level HIV stigma. METHODS: A repeated cross-sectional design was developed to measure changes in HIV knowledge and HIV-related stigma domains among community members exposed to the project. Two cross-sectional surveys were implemented at baseline (respondent n=560) and endline (respondent n=560). T-tests were employed to assess changes on three stigma domains: fear of HIV infection through daily activity, shame associated with having HIV and blame towards people with HIV. Baseline scales were confirmed at endline, and each scale was regressed on demographic characteristics, HIV knowledge and exposure to intervention activities. RESULTS: No differences were observed in respondent characteristics at baseline and endline. Significant changes were observed in HIV transmission knowledge, fear of HIV infection and shame associated with having HIV from baseline to endline. Respondents exposed to three specific activities (monthly campaign, Funfair and IEC materials) were less likely to exhibit stigma along the dimensions of fear (3.8 points lower on average compared to respondents exposed to none or only one intervention; 95% CI: −7.3 to −0.3) and shame (4.1 points lower; 95% CI: −7.7 to −0.6), net of demographic controls and baseline levels of stigma. Personally knowing someone with HIV was associated with low fear and shame, and females were less likely to possess attitudes of shame compared to males. CONCLUSIONS: The multivariate linear models suggest that a combination of three interventions was critical in shifting community-level stigma – monthly campaign, Funfair and IEC materials. This is especially important given Thailand's new national AIDS strategy to reduce HIV-related stigma and discrimination by half by 2016. Knowing which interventions to invest in for HIV stigma reduction is crucial for country-wide expansion and scale-up of intervention activities.
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spelling pubmed-38331042013-11-20 Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand Jain, Aparna Nuankaew, Ratana Mongkholwiboolphol, Nungruthai Banpabuth, Arunee Tuvinun, Rachada Oranop na Ayuthaya, Pakprim Richter, Kerry J Int AIDS Soc Global action to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination INTRODUCTION: HIV stigma and discrimination are major issues affecting people living with HIV in their everyday lives. In Thailand, a project was implemented to address HIV stigma and discrimination within communities with four activities: (1) monthly banking days; (2) HIV campaigns; (3) information, education and communication (IEC) materials and (4) “Funfairs.” This study evaluates the effect of project interventions on reducing community-level HIV stigma. METHODS: A repeated cross-sectional design was developed to measure changes in HIV knowledge and HIV-related stigma domains among community members exposed to the project. Two cross-sectional surveys were implemented at baseline (respondent n=560) and endline (respondent n=560). T-tests were employed to assess changes on three stigma domains: fear of HIV infection through daily activity, shame associated with having HIV and blame towards people with HIV. Baseline scales were confirmed at endline, and each scale was regressed on demographic characteristics, HIV knowledge and exposure to intervention activities. RESULTS: No differences were observed in respondent characteristics at baseline and endline. Significant changes were observed in HIV transmission knowledge, fear of HIV infection and shame associated with having HIV from baseline to endline. Respondents exposed to three specific activities (monthly campaign, Funfair and IEC materials) were less likely to exhibit stigma along the dimensions of fear (3.8 points lower on average compared to respondents exposed to none or only one intervention; 95% CI: −7.3 to −0.3) and shame (4.1 points lower; 95% CI: −7.7 to −0.6), net of demographic controls and baseline levels of stigma. Personally knowing someone with HIV was associated with low fear and shame, and females were less likely to possess attitudes of shame compared to males. CONCLUSIONS: The multivariate linear models suggest that a combination of three interventions was critical in shifting community-level stigma – monthly campaign, Funfair and IEC materials. This is especially important given Thailand's new national AIDS strategy to reduce HIV-related stigma and discrimination by half by 2016. Knowing which interventions to invest in for HIV stigma reduction is crucial for country-wide expansion and scale-up of intervention activities. International AIDS Society 2013-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3833104/ /pubmed/24242262 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.3.18711 Text en © 2013 Jain A et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Global action to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination
Jain, Aparna
Nuankaew, Ratana
Mongkholwiboolphol, Nungruthai
Banpabuth, Arunee
Tuvinun, Rachada
Oranop na Ayuthaya, Pakprim
Richter, Kerry
Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title_full Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title_fullStr Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title_short Community-based interventions that work to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in Thailand
title_sort community-based interventions that work to reduce hiv stigma and discrimination: results of an evaluation study in thailand
topic Global action to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3833104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24242262
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.16.3.18711
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