Abstract

It is argued that the prevalence of AIDS is substantially under-represented in existing national AIDS data. Thus although official statistics demonstrate significant recent shifts in transmission routes for HIV, health educators are faced with a problem because it is difficult to develop preventive strategies against a syndrome whose prevalence can only be estimated. Problems of the true extent of the prevalence of HIV are compounded when there is a lack of knowledge about the specifics of heterosexual behaviour. It is unwise to assume that the protective strategies developed by gay men in the face of HIV are routinely available for adoption by heterosexuals, who are characterised by social divisions of age, gender and relative amounts of social power. These concerns represent a problem for health educators. To date, sociological work may not have made the most effective contribution in its support of intervention strategies against HIV/AIDS. Examination of the empirical literature on lay concepts of health and illness reveals a pessimistic stance on the part of some researchers about the ability of individuals to modify behaviour. More positive readings of their own data are possible. The traditional concerns to emphasise the socio-economic determinants of health and behaviour, now also shared by some health educators, should not obscure a concern for the fate of individuals. The most effective contribution that health promotion may be able to make to the control of HIV in the heterosexual population is to assist in the development of strategies of empowerment and ‘horizontal intervention’.

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