Globalization and Health | |
Masculinity as a barrier to men's use of HIV services in Zimbabwe | |
Simon Gregson3  Constance Nyamukapa3  Zivai Mupambireyi2  Claudius Madanhire2  Catherine Campbell1  Morten Skovdal1  | |
[1] Institute of Social Psychology, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK;Biomedical Research and Training Institute, Harare, Zimbabwe;Department of Infectious Disease and Epidemiology, Imperial College, London, UK | |
关键词: Africa; HIV services; AIDS; VCT; ART access; masculinity; Gender; | |
Others : 819705 DOI : 10.1186/1744-8603-7-13 |
|
received in 2010-08-26, accepted in 2011-05-15, 发布年份 2011 | |
![]() |
【 摘 要 】
Background
A growing number of studies highlight men's disinclination to make use of HIV services. This suggests there are factors that prevent men from engaging with health services and an urgent need to unpack the forms of sociality that determine men's acceptance or rejection of HIV services.
Methods
Drawing on the perspectives of 53 antiretroviral drug users and 25 healthcare providers, we examine qualitatively how local constructions of masculinity in rural Zimbabwe impact on men's use of HIV services.
Results
Informants reported a clear and hegemonic notion of masculinity that required men to be and act in control, to have know-how, be strong, resilient, disease free, highly sexual and economically productive. However, such traits were in direct conflict with the 'good patient' persona who is expected to accept being HIV positive, take instructions from nurses and engage in health-enabling behaviours such as attending regular hospital visits and refraining from alcohol and unprotected extra-marital sex. This conflict between local understandings of manhood and biopolitical representations of 'a good patient' can provide a possible explanation to why so many men do not make use of HIV services in Zimbabwe. However, once men had been counselled and had the opportunity to reflect upon the impact of ART on their productivity and social value, it was possible for some to construct new and more ART-friendly versions of masculinity.
Conclusion
We urge HIV service providers to consider the obstacles that prevent many men from accessing their services and argue for community-based and driven initiatives that facilitate safe and supportive social spaces for men to openly discuss social constructions of masculinity as well as renegotiate more health-enabling masculinities.
【 授权许可】
2011 Skovdal et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
20140712012705325.pdf | 306KB | ![]() |
【 参考文献 】
- [1]WHO: WHO gender policy: intergrating gender perspectives in the work of WHO. Geneva: World Health Organisation; 2003.
- [2]Obermeyer CM, Sankara A, Bastien V, Parsons M: Gender and HIV testing in Burkina Faso: An exploratory study. Social Science & Medicine 2009, 69:877-884.
- [3]Shisana O, Simbayi L: Nelson Madela/HSRC study of HIV/AIDS: South African national HIV prevalence, behavioural risks, and mass media household survey 2002. Cape Town: Human Sciences Research Council; 2002.
- [4]Chirawu P, Langhaug L, Mavhu W, Pascoe S, Dirawo J, Cowan F: Acceptability and challenges of implementing voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) in rural Zimbabwe: evidence from the Regai Dzive Shiri Project. AIDS Care 2010, 22:81-88.
- [5]Coetzee D, Hildebrand K, Boulle A, Maartens G, Louis F, Labatala V, Reuter H, Ntwana N, Goemaere E: Outcomes after two years of providing antiretroviral treatment in Khayelitsha, South Africa. AIDS 2004, 18:887-895.
- [6]Seeley J, Allison E: HIV/AIDS in fishing communities: Challenges to delivering antiretroviral therapy to vulnerable groups. AIDS Care 2005, 17:688-697.
- [7]Muula AS, Ngulube TJ, Siziya S, Makupe C, Umar E, Prozesky H, Wiysonge C, Mataya R: Gender distribution of adult patients on highly active antiretrovrial therapy (HAART) in Southern Africa: a systematic review. BMC Publ Health 2007, 7:63. BioMed Central Full Text
- [8]Kipp W, Alibhai A, Saunders LD, Senthilselvan A, Kaler A, Konde-Lule J, Okech-Ojony J, Rubaale T: Gender differences in antiretroviral treatment outcomes of HIV patients in rural Uganda. AIDS Care 2010, 22:271-278.
- [9]Van der Borght SF, Schim van der Loeff MF, Clevenbergh P, Kabarega JP, Kamo E, van Cranenburgh K, Rijckborst H, Lange JM, Rinke de Wit TF: Long-term voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) uptake dynamics in a multicountry HIV workplace program in sub-Saharan Africa. AIDS Care 2010, 22:195-205.
- [10]WHO UNAIDS UNICEF: [http://www.who.int/hiv/pub/tuapr_2009_en.pdf] webciteTowards Universal Access: Scaling up priority HIV/AIDs interventions in the health sector - Progress Report. Geneva: WHO Press; 2009. September 2009 edn
- [11]Sani M, Mohammed A, Asamu B, Yusuf S, Samaila A, Borodo M: AIDS mortality in a tertiary health institution: A four-year review. AIDS 2006, 98:862-866.
- [12]Desilva MB, Merry SP, Fischer PR, Rohrer JE, Isichei CO, Cha SS: Youth, unemployment, and male gender predict mortality in AIDS patients started on HAART in Nigeria. AIDS Care: Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV 2009, 21:70-77.
- [13]Hirsch J: Gender, Sexuality, and antiretroviral therapy: using social science to enhance outcoms and inform secondary prevention strategies. AIDS 2007, 21:21-29.
- [14]Izugbara CO, Undie CC, Mudege NN, Ezeh AC: Male youth and Voluntary Counseling and HIV-Testing: the case of Malawi and Uganda. Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning 2009, 9:243-259.
- [15]Fitzgerald M, Collumbien M, Hosegood V: "No one can ask me 'Why do you take that stuff?'": men's experiences of antiretroviral treatment in South Africa. AIDS Care 2010, 22:355-360.
- [16]Lee C, Owens RG: The psychology of men's health. Buckingham: Open University Press; 2002.
- [17]Connell R: Masculinities. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press; 1995.
- [18]Morrell R: Changing Men in Southern Africa. London: Zed Books; 2001.
- [19]Campbell C: Migrancy, masculine identities and AIDS: The psychosocial context of HIV transmission on the South African gold mines. Social Science & Medicine 1997, 45:273-281.
- [20]Clatterbaugh K: Contemporary perspectives on masculinity: men, women and politics in US society. 2nd edition. Boulder; Oxford: Westview Press; 1997.
- [21]Campbell C: Letting them die: why HIV/AIDS intervention programmes fail. [Oxford]: International African Institute; 2003.
- [22]Moscovici S: Foreword. In Health and Illness: A Social Psychological Analysis. Edited by Herzlich C. London: Academic Press [for] the European Association of Experimental Social Psychology; 1973:ix-xiv.
- [23]Lindegger G, Maxwell J: Gender analysis of targeted AIDS interventions. Melbourne, Australia: Oxfam; 2005.
- [24]Nzioka C: Perspectives of Adolescent Boys on the Risks of Unwanted Pregnancy and Sexually Transmitted Infections: Kenya. Reproductive Health Matters 2001, 9:108-117.
- [25]Lindegger G, Quayle M: Masculinity and HIV/AIDS. In HIV/AIDS in South Africa 25 years on: psychosocial perspectives. Edited by Rohleder P, Swartz L, Kalichman S, Simbayi L. London: Springer; 2009:41-54.
- [26]Courtenay W: Construtions of masculinity and their influence on men's well-being: a theory of gender and health. Social Science & Medicine 2000, 50:1385-1401.
- [27]Lindegger G, Maxwell J: Teenage masculinity: The double bind of conformity to hegemonic standards. In From boys to men. Edited by Shefer T, Ratele K, Strebel A, Shabalala N, Biukema R. Cape Town: UCT Press; 2007:94-112.
- [28]Kaler A: "My Girlfriends Could Fill a Yanu-Yanu Bus. Demographic Research 2003, Specially Collection 1:349-372.
- [29]Nguyen V: Antiretroviral Globalism, Biopolitics, and Therapeutic Citizenship. In Global Assemblages: Technology, Politics, and Ethics as Anthropological Problems. Edited by Ong A, Collier S. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing; 2005:124-144.
- [30]Nguyen V, Ako C, Niamba P, Sylla A, Tiendrebeogo I: Adherence as therapeutic citizenship: impact of the history of access to antiretroviral drugs on adherence to treatment. AIDS 2007, 21:31-35.
- [31]Richey L: Gendering the Therapeutic Citizen: ARVs and Reproductive Health. In Book Gendering the Therapeutic Citizen: ARVs and Reproductive Health (Editor ed.^eds.). City: University of Cape Town; 2006:31.
- [32]Barker G, Ricardo C: Young Men and the Construction of Masculinity in Sub-Saharan Africa: Implications for HIV/AIDS, Conflict, and Violence. In Book Young Men and the Construction of Masculinity in Sub-Saharan Africa: Implications for HIV/AIDS, Conflict, and Violence (Editor ed.^eds.). City: Social Development Department, The World Bank; 2005.
- [33]Colvin C, Robins S: Positive Men in Hard, Neoliberal Times: Engendering Health Citizenship in South Africa. In Gender and HIV/AIDS: critical perspectives from the developing world. Edited by Boesten J, Poku N. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing Limited; 2009:177-190.
- [34]Gregson S, Nyamukapa C, Lopman B, Mushati P, Garnett G, Chandiwana S, Anderson R: A critique of early models of the demographic impact of HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa based on empirical data from Zimbabwe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2007, 104:14586-14591.
- [35]Campbell C, Scott K, Madanhire C, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: A 'good hospital': Nurse and patient perceptions of good clinical care for HIV-positive people on antiretroviral treatment in rural Zimbabwe--A mixed-methods qualitative study. Int J Nursing Studs 2011, 48:175-183.
- [36]Skovdal M, Campbell C, Nhongo K, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: Contextual and psychosocial influences on antiretroviral therapy adherence in rural Zimbabwe: towards a systematic framework for programme planners. International Journal of Health Planning and Management, in press.
- [37]Campbell C, Skovdal M, Mugurungi O, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: "We, the AIDS people...": Through what mechanisms have antiretroviral therapy created a context for ARV users to resist stigma and construct positive identities? American Journal of Public Health, in press.
- [38]Campbell C, Scott K, Madanhire C, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: Sources of motivation and frustration among healthcare workers in the new era of HIV care brought about by ARV roll-out in rural Zimbabwe. AIDS Care, in press.
- [39]Skovdal M, Campbell C, Madanhire C, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: Challenges faced by elderly guardians in sustaining the adherence to antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected children in Zimbabwe. AIDS Care 2011.
- [40]Skovdal M, Campbell C, Madanhire C, Nyamukapa C, Gregson S: When masculinity interferes with women's treatment of HIV infection: A qualitative study about adherence to antiretroviral therapy in Zimbabwe. Journal of the International AIDS Society, in press.
- [41]Bwambale F, Ssali S, Byaruhanga S, Kalyango J, Karamagi C: Voluntary HIV counselling and testing among men in rural western Uganda: Implications for HIV prevention. BMC Public Health 2008, 8:263. BioMed Central Full Text
- [42]Wetherell M, Edley N: Negotiating hegemonic masculinity: imaginary positions and psycho-discursive practices. Feminism & Psychology 1998, 9:335-356.
- [43]Tolhurst R, de Koning K, Price J, Kemp J, Theobald S, Aquire S: The challenge of infectious disease: time to take gender into account. Journal of Health Management 2002, 4:135-151.
- [44]Chersich MF, Luchters SMF, Othigo MJ, Yard E, Mandaliya K, Temmerman M: HIV testing and counselling for women attending child health clinics: an opportunity for entry to prevent mother-to-child transmission and HIV treatment. Int J STD AIDS 2008, 19:42-46.