Abstract

BackgroundOnce effective therapy for a previously untreatable condition is made available, a normalisation of the disease often occurs. As part of a broader initiative to monitor the implementation of the national antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme, this qualitative study investigated the impact of ART availability on perceptions of HIV in a rural ward of North Tanzania and its implications for prevention.MethodsA mix of qualitative methods was used including semi-structured interviews with 53 ART clinic clients and service providers. Four group activities were conducted with persons living with HIV. Data were analyzed using the qualitative software package NVIVO-7.ResultsPeople on ART often reported feeling increasingly comfortable with their status reflecting a certain "normalization" of the disease. This was attributed to seeing other people affected by HIV, regaining physical health, returning to productive activities and receiving emotional support from health service providers. Overcoming internalized feelings of shame facilitated disclosure of HIV status, helped to sustain treatment, and stimulated VCT uptake. However "blaming" stigma - where people living with HIV were considered responsible for acquiring a "moral disease" - persisted in the community and anticipating it was a key barrier to disclosure and VCT uptake. Attributing HIV symptoms to witchcraft seemed an effective mechanism to transfer "blame" from the family unit to an external force but could lead to treatment interruption.ConclusionAs long as an HIV diagnosis continues to have moral connotations, a de-stigmatisation of HIV paralleling that occurring with diseases like cancer is unlikely to occur. Maximizing synergies between HIV treatment and prevention requires an enabling environment for HIV status disclosure, treatment continuation, and safer sexual behaviours. Local leaders should be informed and sensitised and communities mobilised to address the blame-dimension of HIV stigma.

Highlights

  • Once effective therapy for a previously untreatable condition is made available, a normalisation of the disease often occurs

  • This is of particular relevance in the context of generalised epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa where 22 million people live with HIV/AIDS [23], most of whom are unaware of their own and their partner's HIV status [24,25], and where between 45% and 75% of married HIV-positive individuals have HIV-negative spouses [26,27]

  • As part of a broader study exploring attendance rates at an antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinic in a semi-rural ward of northern Tanzania [32,33], this study investigated the impact of ART provision on perceptions of HIV and its implications for prevention

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Summary

Introduction

Once effective therapy for a previously untreatable condition is made available, a normalisation of the disease often occurs. As the case of cancer shows, stigmatised diseases previously seen as a "death sentence" tend to be progressively perceived as "any another disease" and to "normalise", once effective therapy is made available [5]. Following this logic, the provision of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in resource-poor settings was expected to mitigate stigma by turning AIDS into a manageable condition, subsequently leading to improved rates of disclosure and HIV testing [6,7], and to safer sexual behaviours. This is of particular relevance in the context of generalised epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa where 22 million people live with HIV/AIDS [23], most of whom are unaware of their own and their partner's HIV status [24,25], and where between 45% and 75% of married HIV-positive individuals have HIV-negative spouses [26,27]

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