Abstract
PurposeWorking with health providers to reduce HIV stigma in the healthcare setting is an important strategy to improve service utilization and quality of care, especially for young people who are sexually active before marriage, are sexual minorities, or who sell sex. A stigma reduction training program for health providers in Bangladesh was evaluated. MethodsA cohort of 300 healthcare providers were given a self-administered questionnaire, then attended a 2-day HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights training (including a 90-minute session on stigma issues). Six months later, the cohort repeated the survey and participated in a 1-day supplemental training on stigma, which included reflection on personal values and negative impacts of stigma. A third survey was administered 6 months later. A cross-sectional survey of clients age 15–24 years was implemented before and after the second stigma training to assess client satisfaction with services. ResultsProvider agreement that people living with HIV should be ashamed of themselves decreased substantially (35.3%–19.7%–16.3%; p < .001), as did agreement that sexually active young people (50.3%–36.0%–21.7%; p < .001) and men who have sex with men (49.3%–38.0%–24.0%; p < .001) engage in “immoral behavior.” Young clients reported improvement in overall satisfaction with services after the stigma trainings (63.5%–97.6%; p < .001). ConclusionsThis study indicates that a targeted stigma reduction intervention can rapidly improve provider attitudes and increase service satisfaction among young people. More funding to scale up these interventions is needed.
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