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Sexual misconceptions that predispose African adolescent girls to HIV infection in Umlazi Township, Durban.Ogana, Winifred N. January 2006 (has links)
This dissertation elicits focuses on sexual misconceptions which pose challenges to HIV/AIDS prevention and control among African adolescent girls in Umlazi Township, Durban. The study springs from the realisation that mere misconceptions related to sexuality could instigate risky behaviour resulting in HIV infection, and ultimately, result in premature death related to AIDS-related illnesses. Due to their physiological vulnerability, adolescent women are among a group at highest risk for contracting HIV in South Africa The study seeks, therefore, to understand how sexual misconceptions predispose girls to HIV infection against the context of gender, sexuality and reproductive health. The latter three issues are shaped by myriad forces working against the adolescent group. The study concludes with recommendations focused on challenging and removing sexual misconceptions with gender-sensitive interventions. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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An assessment of the impact of HIV/AIDS on the business sector in South Africa and an analysis of HIV/AIDS workplace programmes.Makanjee, Prashila. January 2003 (has links)
HIV / AIDS in the South African present context remains fraught with obstacles and challenges. The previous regime's willingness to turn a blind eye to the problem, combined with the present government's confused response has accelerated the disease and it's devastating impact to pandemic proportions. This has placed additional pressure on other sectors to respond. While civil society challenges government's delaying tactics and seeks to ease the plight of those living with HIV, the business sector is being called upon to act, in the interests of the stability of the national economy and it's own survival. Business is identified, locally and abroad, as the most relevant environment for intervention because of it's unique capacity to impact on both the workforce and the consumer market simultaneously. Business however exists for the purpose of making a profit. This is in itself an area of study that requires investigation: how does business meet the pressure to 'do the right thing' and protect its own best interests? This study will consider how some businesses have shifted the burden of AIDS, while others have prepared to meet the costs associated with implementing any interventions. The primary objective of this study is to investigate the impact of HIV / AIDS on the business sector with an assessment of the risk faced by business in the immediate and long-term. It further seeks to analyse business's current response in the context of international best practice standards. Case studies of Workplace HIV / AIDS Programmes are used to identify and analyse successful interventions that may be utilised in the South African context. While there are a few outstanding examples of workplace interventions being implemented in South Africa, there is some concern that too many companies are processing HIV / AIDS as a paper exercise without the commitment and care required for change. The impact of the disease on a physical level is compounded by stigmatization and fear. Issues of discrimination and intolerance permeate the environment in which employers are required to implement programmes that shift knowledge, attitudes and behaviour around HIV / AIDS. The secondary objective of this study is to test the emerging hypothesis that the face-to-face or one-on-one intervention is the most effective in successfully changing knowledge and attitudes about HIV / AIDS and can therefore influence a long-term change in behaviour. This study seeks to provide guidelines and recommendation for companies willing to implement HIV / AIDS workplace interventions by presenting an overview of the options available and indicating where best to invest limited resources. While the nature and scope of the study is by no means conclusive and remains open to ongoing social and medical research, it remains relevant in that it is placed in the context of timeless best practice. / Thesis (M.B.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.
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The role of church leaders in HIV and AIDS prevention in the Sweetwaters Community : Pietermaritzburg area.Gaga, John. January 2010 (has links)
This study sought to investigate the role of church leaders in the prevention and management
of HIV and AIDS in the Sweetwaters community. In terms of HIV and AIDS South Africa is
the most affected country in sub-Saharan Africa with KwaZulu-Natal as the epicenter of the
pandemic. Therefore it is against this backdrop that the researcher articulates the
management and leadership roles of church leaders in the prevention of HIV and AIDS as the
center of this study. It is imperative that church pastors equip among themselves in order for
them to have a significant effect in addressing HIV and AIDS issues in a context like the
Sweetwaters community, for example. Church leaders are strategically positioned to play a
central role in the combat against the pandemic within their churches and communities.
This study has been undertaken using questionnaires and focus group studies with ten church
leaders from Sweetwaters the community. The research seeks to: (a) gain a understanding of
challenges confronting church leaders; (b) understand how they can tackle this challenge
effectively as regards their leadership role.
The above mentioned is summed up in the main research question of the study, which is
formulated as follows: How do the church leaders understand and respond to their leadership
role within their churches and the community in the supervision of a diversity of issues
arising from the pandemic.
The study pointed out that the involvement of church leaders in the prevention of HIV and
AIDS is generally limited to spiritual and relief work. The only structured program available
to the particular local churches, and which has been implemented, is to care for orphans. The
position taken in this study is that there is a need for church leaders to develop modern
realistic HIV and AIDS educational programs and to train their church members to engage in
HIV and AIDS issue. / Thesis (M.Com.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville, 2010.
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HIV : impact on community health nursing personnelBrookbank, Kathleen January 1992 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this thesis. / School of Nursing
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Patterns and attitudes towards breastfeeding in the era of HIV/AIDS : a case study of Greater Mafikeng District in the North West Province in the Republic of South Africa / Shirley M. MalakaneMalakane, Shirley M January 2004 (has links)
HN/AIDS in South Africa has grown to very serious proportions. An estimated number
of 5.3million South Africans are infected with HIV and the majority of these infections
are in the reproductive age group. Based on Annual Antenatal survey 2002,of the total
2.95 million were women aged 15-49, with an estimation of 91271 babies infected
through mother to child transmission. Breastfeeding is said to be an ideal food for growth
and development of a child. Given that HIV is transmissible through breastfeeding, the
paper aims at examining patterns and attitudes towards breastfeeding in the era of
HIV/AIDS.
A total of 400 respondents drawn from Mafikeng district were interviewed. The majority
were aged 20-39, never married, rural, unemployed with high school level of education.
Areas of interest were knowledge about HIV/AIDS, patterns of breastfeeding and
attitudes towards alternative methods of infant feeding for an HIV positive mother.
Previous reports gave clarity to HIV transmission rates at various stages of life. Evidence
has shown that rates of transmission are higher in early stages than late stages of life. Few weeks of life from 6-8 weeks may particularly be a period of high risk than ages above three months. Transmission might have occurred during pregnancy, labor or through breastfeeding, whereby data has shown that colostrums have high concentration of Human Immune Virus than mature milk.
The study shows that breastfeeding is still regarded as an important infant feeding
method that is ideal for child's growth and development but HIV infection is seen as a
disturbing factor to successful breastfeeding. Fifty four percent of respondents did not
breastfeed exclusively as promoted by UNICEF and WHO; mean duration for exclusive
breastfeeding is two months, support is given by SADHS 1998, mean duration for
complementary feeding is two months which gives an indication that more infants are at
higher risk of contracting the virus should their mothers test positive which in turn gives
rise to high infant /childhood morbidity and mortality rates.
There is a need to strengthen and expand programmes such as VCT and PMTCT in all
communities especially in rural setting where there is lack of pure water supply and
proper sanitation. Efforts to reduce the risk of transmission should therefore be centered
on promoting the understanding that mixed feeding or breastfeeding with supplementary
feeding carries the highest risk of HIV transmission compared to exclusive breastfeeding
or exclusive formula feeding. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc. (Population Studies) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2004
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Perceptions and attitudes on the management of HIV and AIDS : in the Department of Agriculture, Conservation, Environment and Tourism of North West province in Republic of South Africa / Pheletso Abednigo MothibediMothibedi, Pheletso Abednigo January 2005 (has links)
The researcher is propelled and motivated by the Minister of Public Service
Association, Geraldine Frasser-Moleketi, recognising the serious nature of
HIV and AIDS and its impact on South Africa when she initiated the Impact
and Action Project in January 2000, which was aimed at ensuring that Public
Service is able to sustain a quality service in spite of pandemic: AIDS.
The apprehension of writing on the theme is to enlighten both the employer
and employees with their obligations, rights and legal framework in the
management of the pandemic: AIDS within the employment perspective. The
eminence of the study is based on the participation of management and their
intervention, because without their involvement, AIDS deaths translate into
lost productivity, increased high rate of absenteeism, short or long illnesses,
and lower morale of employees and hampering of rendering of services.
The study comprises of five chapters, containing the orientation of the study;
literature review; research design and methodology; data analysis and results
and summary, findings and recommendation, respectively. The instrument
employed to gather data was applied in five regions, and data is gathered from
a target sample of 96 out of 2084 employees. Please note in order to avoid the
continuous use of "HN and AIDS", virus, epidemic, disease or cumbersome
descriptions, the noun pandemic: AIDS, will be used and will denote "HIV
and AIDS". / MBA (HRM) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2005
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Location, dislocation and risk for HIV: a case study of refugee adolescents in Zambia.Nanyangwe, Lenganji January 2006 (has links)
Refugees are not a new phenomenon and their plight has been felt the world over. Africa continues to see large numbers of people displaced through armed conflict, producing more refugees on the worlds&rsquo / most poverty stricken continent than any other.<br />
The implications of these displacements of people dislocated from their places of habitual residence create much concern, particularly in the wake of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Such dislocations and displacements imply separation from family and communities, including socio-economic benefits that accrue to them. There is an apparent problem of accessing health services, educational services, sources of livelihood and protection from sexual and emotional abuse. Refugee children and women are said to be the most vulnerable, although until recently adolescents in armed conflict were not considered as a<br />
special group of children requiring special attention. The main objective of this research was to investigate levels of risk for HIV among refugee adolescents in Zambia and to determine how location relates to risk. Of particular interest was the difference in risk experienced in rural and urban areas. The researcher&rsquo / s hypothesis was that refugee adolescents in rural camps of Zambia are at greater risk because they lack adequate sources of income, health, and education in comparison to urban areas. The research was located within two theoretical underpinnings namely the social cognitive theory and the AIDS Risk Reduction Model (ARRM). The theory posits that a reciprocal relationship exists between environmental contexts, personal factors and behavior. The model explains how people change behavior that reduces risk for HIV by changing perceptions on sexual activity and when they enact the knowledge obtained from HIV preventive programmes. The methodology was located within both the qualitative and quantitative research<br />
approaches. Qualitative because firstly, the research is a comparative case study and secondly, it is the first time such a study is being conducted. The researcher also made use of the quantitative through the survey and secondary HIV/AIDS statistical data.
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The contemporary construction of the causality of HIV/AIDS :a discourse analysis and its implications for understanding national policy statements on the epidemic in South Africa.Judge, Melanie January 2005 (has links)
This study was concerned with the social construction of HIV/AIDS at the policy level in contemporary South Africa, and how such constructions shape the manner in which the epidemic is understood in popular discourse.
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Attitudes and beliefs around HIV and AIDS stigma: the impact of the film "The sky in her eyes"Lesko, Igor January 2005 (has links)
This research explored cultural perceptions of HIV& / AIDS with students at the University of the Western Cape and attempted to understand how these perceptions of the disease reinforce stigma and stigmatising attitudes towards people living with HIV/AIDS. This study investigated HIV/AIDS stigma as a social phenomenon and analysed the socio-cultural and historical roots of HIV/AIDS stigma.
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The discursive construction of treatment decisions in the management of HIV diseaseMoore, Alison Rotha January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Linguistics & Psychology, Department of Linguistics, 2003. / Bibliography: p. 397-424. / Introduction -- Models of shared decision-making in medicine -- Framing the study -- The analytic goals of modelling agency -- The context of treatment decision-making in HIV -- Agency and alignment -- Study conclusions and implications. / The quality of doctor-patient communication has been shown to influence treatment uptake, adherence and effectiveness in HIV medicine and elsewhere. Increasingly, it is considered essential that doctors and patients jointly participate in decisions concerning treatment. There is a growing body of literature describing joint decisionmaking and suggesting guidelines for its practice. Few of these studies, however, relate their descriptions of medical decision-making as a social process to the ways in which patterns of verbal interaction realize or foreclose on joint decision-making. -- Dominant models of medical decision-making view shared decision-making as a midpoint between enlightened paternalism and informed choice. Based on a corpus of HIV consultations audio-recorded in Sydney in the late 1990s, this thesis argues that it can be better modelled as a particular type of social process, which differs across a number of dimensions from other styles of medical decision-making, specifiable as contextual parameters of meaning. The thesis then identifies ways in which specific discursive practices realize these contextual parameters. -- A major component of the thesis focuses on agency, and a model is presented in the form of a socio-semantic network, drawing on work by van Leeuwen (1996) and others, which relates a range of grammatical features, not only transitivity patterns, to ways of construing social agency. The thesis then considers the way in which doctors and patients mobilise these and other resources for bringing together potentially conflicting points of view in framing and articulating treatment decisions. Here I draw on notions of mutual alignment (e.g., Goffman 1981) but expand the analysis of what is aligned to account for speakers' implicit discourse orientation, as well as more overt markers. -- Findings emphasise the relationship between representing and enacting agentive roles; the importance of doctors and patients mutually projecting each other's voices; and the variable and iterative character of shared decision-making. The research demonstrates how doctors and patients negotiate a complex, interactionally and symbolically mediated agency, and shows that patients often take the lead in developing more collaborative decision-making practice. There are still institutionally and socially determined limits to the degree of control patients may exercise within the consultation, many of which are of course well founded. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / xvii, 533, [22] p. ill
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