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Perceptions of young Indian adolescents in Chatsworth, towards HIV and AIDSGovender, Dhanasagree 10 1900 (has links)
Text in English / Aim: The aim of this study was to explore the perceptions’ of young Indian adolescents in Chatsworth, towards HIV and AIDS.
Methods: An interpretative phenomenological analysis design was used. The participants were selected using judgemental purposive sampling. Nine participants were interviewed. The sample size was determined by data saturation. Data was collected through individual interviews guided by an interview schedule. The interpretative phenomenological analysis framework for data analysis was used for data analysis.
Results: The study revealed that participants were well informed about HIV and AIDS. Participants reported disinterest in HIV prevention programmes due to inundation with repetitive information; disinterested attitudes of facilitators of these programme as well as fear of social stigmatisation. The misconceptions that were highlighted were related to very little personal contact with people living with HIV and AIDS.
Conclusions and Recommendations: These findings have revealed that there is a need for a revision in HIV/AIDS prevention programme. The HIV/AIDS school programmes should be contextual relevant to learners from diverse backgrounds and communities. / Health Studies / M.A. (Nursing Science)
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Evaluation of the management of HIV and AIDS workplace policy at Statistics South AfricaMabuza, Cynthia Mmamuthudi 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the management of the HIV and AIDS workplace policy at Statistics South Africa (Stats SA). This entailed an assessment of the levels of awareness amongst employees, and an assessment of employees’ knowledge of the policy and its implementation. Data were collected through a structured questionnaire administered to randomly selected employees. It was found that the respondents’ level of awareness of the HIV and AIDS workplace policy at Stats SA was satisfactory. Although some differences were observed, overall it seems that Stats SA was successful in promoting general awareness of its policy and its contents. However, as far as the respondents’ attitudes and opinions relating to the implementation of the policy at Stats SA are concerned, several issues still need to be addressed. / Sociology / M.A. (Social Behaviour Studies in HIV/AIDS)
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The spatial distribution of HIV and AIDS in Gauteng, South AfricaEzike-Dennis, Uchechukwu Nneka 31 December 2007 (has links)
Since the earliest reported cases of HIV/AIDS probably in 1959 in Africa, there has been a
consistent progression in the new HIV/AIDS infection cases. In South Africa, Gauteng, records one
of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in the country.
The Department of Health (DOH) South Africa conducts ongoing studies on HIV/AIDS at provincial
levels; these studies monitor the prevalence of HIV/AIDS amongst pregnant women attending
antenatal clinics, as a tool for determining and monitoring the prevalence, trends, patterns and
spread of the disease in the general population.
This study analyses sentinel and spatial data collected from the (DOH) and Statistics South Africa
(StatsSA) respectively, and depicts them in the form of spatial maps, and then critically analyses
the spatial patterns that occur.
The research findings would hopefully contribute to the overall knowledge of HIV/AIDS and provide
framework and relevant literature for further investigation. / Geography / M.Sc. (Geography)
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The spatial distribution of HIV and AIDS in Gauteng, South AfricaEzike-Dennis, Uchechukwu Nneka 31 December 2007 (has links)
Since the earliest reported cases of HIV/AIDS probably in 1959 in Africa, there has been a
consistent progression in the new HIV/AIDS infection cases. In South Africa, Gauteng, records one
of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in the country.
The Department of Health (DOH) South Africa conducts ongoing studies on HIV/AIDS at provincial
levels; these studies monitor the prevalence of HIV/AIDS amongst pregnant women attending
antenatal clinics, as a tool for determining and monitoring the prevalence, trends, patterns and
spread of the disease in the general population.
This study analyses sentinel and spatial data collected from the (DOH) and Statistics South Africa
(StatsSA) respectively, and depicts them in the form of spatial maps, and then critically analyses
the spatial patterns that occur.
The research findings would hopefully contribute to the overall knowledge of HIV/AIDS and provide
framework and relevant literature for further investigation. / Geography / M.Sc. (Geography)
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A comparative analysis of fixed and mobile clinic HIV/AIDS services in Madibeng sub-districtHabedi, Debbie Kgomotso 31 October 2007 (has links)
The scourge of HIV and AIDS can no longer be underestimated. Its devastating effects have
been translated into immeasurable monetary and human costs. Women and children,
particularly among the rural communities, have borne most of the brunt accruing from the
devastating socio-economic consequences of the disease.
PURPOSE
This study is intended to highlight the plight of rural communities who are constantly besieged
by the demand and supply disequilibrium in the provision of primary health care and preventive
interventions.
OBJECTIVES
To describe, compare and analyse HIV / AIDS health care services provided by fixed and
mobile clinics in the Madibeng Sub-District of the North West Province.
POPULATION
The sampled participants were selected from a universal population among pregnant women.
SAMPLING
A sample of 100 pregnant women from the fixed and mobile clinics participated in answering the
questionnaires during their antenatal care visits.
RESEARCH SETTING
The Madibeng Sub-District in the North West Province been selected as a suitable research
site, as it met most of the selection criteria developed by the researcher's judgement sampling.
RESEARCH DESIGN
The data recorded on the questionnaires by the participants was used to compare and analyse
the pregnant women's feelings about HIV / AIDS services of fixed and mobile clinics. Group
discussions were also held prior self completion of questionnaires. Questionnaires were
administered by the researcher and the two health promoters.
FINDINGS
It was found that participants in both mobile and fixed clinic have attended HIV / AIDS health
care services. Fixed clinic and mobile clinic are respectively viewed as offering better health
care services to pregnant women.
CONCLUSIONS
The research results from this study indicate that HIV / AIDS services provided at both the fixed
clinic and mobile service points, including antenatal or prenatal care, are almost similar.
RECOMMENDATIONS
It is recommended for improving HIV / AIDS health care services that health care providers at
Jericho mobile clinic and Jericho fixed clinic intervene by slowing the progression of HIV
infection because it has a negative impact on the lives of women. The Jericho clinic and mobile
clinic staff should be encouraged to adopt the perspective that HIV / AIDS is not a death
sentence, but a preventable disease, not withstanding its deadly consequences on families and
communities. The staff at these clinics is also to be motivated to adopt co-operative health care
and psycho-social strategies, in which team work and the involvement and participation of all
relevant stakeholders is viewed as an integral part of the struggle against HIV / AIDS and its
devastating spread. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
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Parental knowledge on HIV/AIDS in Gauteng Region 3Ngcamu, Esther Avis Gugulethu 06 1900 (has links)
Recognizing that a parent is a key role player in fighting HIV/AIDS, the researcher conducted a study to examine and describe the knowledge parents have of this disease and its virus.
The study was conducted among a sample of 100 parents/guardians, using a questionnaire to
examine the respondents' conceptual, episodic, descriptive, procedural and declarative knowledge of HIV/AIDS.
The study found that the respondents lacked especially conceptual and declarative knowledge and that the main factor contributing to knowledge is the level of education. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
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The story of an immune deficiency disease and its representation in the South African print media (1981-2000)Mathebe, Lucky 25 August 2009 (has links)
This study explores the multiple ways in which Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) functioned through concrete biomedical institutions, namely, the Centres for Disease Control (CDC), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the World Health Organization (WHO). AIDS is viewed as a product of the full range of institutional practices in which it became embedded and in which it was set within the boundaries of Louis Pasteur's germ theory of disease (see the Preface section). This biomedical model of disease was materialized through journalistic practices and sold as news. Within these operative terms can be understood another analytical strategy that also designates the main domain of my study of this contemporary social form: I argue in this thesis that knowledge about AIDS was by no means dependent solely on the objective, scientifically determined, "received narrative" of biomedicine; what is today known as AIDS is also a product of a wide range of social practices produced and reproduced over time and space. AIDS is also an outcome of the resolutions, judgements and decisions that working journalists made over time in terms of what they generated or covered as news; the disease is also product of a large assortment of representational mirrors that I call `authentic voices', to take as good examples, the "narrative of moral protest", the narrative of a "homosexual disease", the narrative of a "heterosexual disease," and the narrative of a "modern-day Black Death" (plague). The story of AIDS in the media can also be seen to be defined by the proliferation of these authentic voices.
From this reading, the distinctive trait of AIDS in the media lies in the fact that it is a constructed object, a disease framed through a specific structure of meanings. When we look at these structure of meanings we find that their moral and cultural assumptions and stereotypical connotations embody certain aspects of the organism of the society within which they were created and nourished over a much longer history. / Sociology / D.Litt. et Phil. (Sociology)
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HIV/AIDS and the role of gender inequality and violence in South African LawMswela, Mphoeng Maureen 06 1900 (has links)
South Africa has not escaped the rising prevalence and severe impact of HIV/AIDS in relation women. From an economic and social vantage point, the HIV/AIDS epidemic hits women the hardest, with underprivileged black women the most susceptible to the virus. The theoretical framework of this research focuses on the intersection between HIV/AIDS, gender inequality and gender violence, and more specifically, on certain cultural practices and customs that contribute towards and exacerbate women’s subordination and inequality, which in turn, increase women’s exposure to become infected with HIV. Relevant to this focus is inevitably an investigation of perceived threats to specific fundamental human rights as a result of some entrenched practices that continue to reinforce women’s subordinate position in society, aggravated by the high incidence of gender violence. / Constitutional, International & Indigenous Law / LL.M.
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An investigation into the utilisation of voluntary counselling and testing services by employees of Mittal Steel in Vanderbijlpark : a case studyMakhutle, Motswaledi Jacob 10 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to understand employees’ perceptions of the benefits of and the challenges in utilising VCT services at the workplace. With Mittal Steel in Vanderbijlpark as a case study, the researcher investigated the types of VCT services offered, the reasons why employees used these services, the perceived benefits and challenges related to these services, and made suggestions for service improvements. Using a qualitative approach, the main data-collection strategies were non-participant observation and in-depth interviews with five purposefully recruited research participants.
The study showed that knowledge of HIV and AIDS among employees was adequate but that this could not be attributed to company efforts only. The study also revealed that employees utilised VCT for personal reasons rather than based on company incentives. Stigmatisation and discrimination appeared to be on the decline. It is recommended that the company could do more to market and promote HIV and AIDS awareness at the workplace. / Sociology / M.A (Sociology - Social Behavioural Studies in HIV/AIDS)
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"Living in two worlds" : optimizing our indigenous knowledge systems to address the modern pandemic, HIV and AIDSNyawose, Theobald Zwelibanzi 15 November 2013 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Technology: Education, Durban University of Technology, 2013. / This thesis focuses on the alarming situation of the rate of HIV infection which is escalating every day in South Africa, and what can be done to address the rate of HIV infection. Much has been tried to curb this escalation, but all efforts have had little effect. This concerns me deeply. So I have looked at the problem from the perspective of education.
I have personally experienced how Zulu indigenous knowledge, in the form of traditional modes of Zulu sexuality education, was used in the past to address the problems of sexually transmitted diseases, and pregnancy before it was sanctioned. I have seen that the rituals performed as part of traditional Zulu sexuality education have been effective.
I believe that indigenous knowledge systems in the South African context refer to a body of knowledge embedded in African philosophical thinking and social practices that have evolved over thousands years. Indigenous knowledge systems acknowledge the rich history and heritage of the people as important contributors to nurturing the values and norms in society, and so form the basis of education for the people. I believe that our indigenous knowledge systems according to the dictates of rites and rituals observed by our forefathers can play a major role in the (sexuality) education of our youth, and can optimise our efforts to fight against the HIV and AIDS pandemic.
This study focuses on the adolescent stage. Adolescence is a phase of discovery and experimentation in which young people develop new feelings, which (coupled with physical maturing) lead to exploring new behaviors and relationships, including sexual behaviours and sexual relationships. Therefore, I believe that adolescents should be targeted because they are just beginning to face social situations in which their decisions and actions about their sexual behaviours and sexual relationships will determine their
future. In addition, adolescents are – or should be – school going, so they can be influenced by what is in their school curriculum.
I have made suggestions about how the Life Orientation Grades 10—12 curriculum can be used to include traditional sexuality education for this purpose. In doing so, I do not suggest that all South African school going teenagers should perform the traditional Zulu rituals, but I am suggesting that the revival and adaption of traditional modes of sexuality education in all cultures could be helpful in the fight against the HIV and AIDS pandemic. I use the Zulu traditions because they are the traditions with which I am familiar.
I have carried out this study to promote the use of Zulu traditional sexuality education to curb the rate of HIV infection among young Zulu people. I believe that this traditional method, if it is used optimally, can reduce the rate of infection and the speed of mortality, as well as the problem of early pregnancy among our Zulu youth, in South Africa. / National Research Foundation
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