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Perceptions, emotions, and competencies of graduate level counselor trainees working with African American and Caucasian female clients with HIV/AIDSWright, Pamela McMichen. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Georgia State University, 2007. / Title from file title page. Gregory Brack,committee chair; Michele Hill, Kenneth B. Matheny, Roger O. Weed, committee members. Electronic text (99 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed June 10, 2008. Includes bibliographical references.
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Marginalized epistemologies : bodily and spiritual knowing among HIV-positive mothers /Tangenberg, Kathleen M. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [233]-243).
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Afrika-vroue en MIV/Vigs : 'n MaatskaplikewerkperspektiefAustin, Petra 25 July 2005 (has links)
This study is aimed at exploring the psychosocial needs and problems experienced by black African women with HIV/AIDS and their families. In order to address these needs and problems it is necessary to determine what HIV/AIDS is, how it is transmitted and what the reasons may be for African women’s vulnerability to acquire HIV. Since the family members of the African woman with HIV/AIDS is also affected by the appearance of the illness it is important to look at needs and problems that may arise in the family. Addressing both the needs of the African woman with HIV/AIDS and that of the family members is of great importance, since these problems cannot be separated and addressed individually. The research methodology applied in this study was firstly defined, after which the various literature chapters followed with descriptions of important concepts and the discussion of HIV/AIDS related aspects. The above-mentioned provide the necessary background and knowledge whereby insight of the needs and problems experienced by African women with HIV/AIDS and their families is possible, as well as how these needs can be addressed. Research findings were schematically r4epresented and thoroughly discussed to determine if there were any comparisons with the assumptions of the study that indicate that African women with HIV/AIDS and their families experience financial- and psychosocial problems because of HIV/AIDS, and serious pressure is placed on them because of these problems. Some guidelines for HIV-counselling were also compiled by integrating the literature study, the research findings and experience in practice. These guidelines show that there are various problems in the different phases of HIV-counselling, that demand specific knowledge and insight from the counsellor in addressing these needs. Lastly a general summary, conclusions and recommendations were made with reference to relevant findings of the study. It was found that specific sexual behaviour among African men and women promote the rapid spread of HIV, and that African men and women should be empowered to prevent the spreading of HIV through relevant information. It also seemed that social welfare organisations are not visible in affected communities and should promote the services they deliver by introducing these services into the affected communities. / Dissertation (MA (Social Work))--University of Pretoria, 2002. / Social Work and Criminology / unrestricted
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Therapeutic processes for support groups for pregnant women living with HIVNdabula, Mandisa 26 August 2011 (has links)
As part of the Serithi project a longitudinal study of HIV positive women diagnosed during pregnancy, support groups for HIV-positive women were established in Mamelodi and Atteridgeville (Tshwane). Eighty-eight women participated in these groups during 2005, with the groups being facilitated by Masters Psychology students. This study explores therapeutic processes in these support groups. Yalom’s therapeutic factors were used as the underlying theory. These are factors that Yalom advances as therapeutic processes in understanding group psychotherapy. The process notes of the Masters Student facilitators, together with the interviews that were conducted with the women after the support group experience, were analysed to identify therapeutic processes that manifested themselves in the support group experience. Qualitative methods were used to collect data and thematic analysis was utilised to analyse the data. The research results revealed that support groups are therapeutic, in the sense that ten of the twelve therapeutic factors advanced by Yalom proved to have been made manifest, or demonstrated, within these groups. These are: altruism, group cohesion, interpersonal learning input, interpersonal learning output, guidance, identification, family re-enactment, instillation of hope and existential factors. The women reported having felt a sense of relief from being part of a group of people who experienced similar issues. They also reported that they learnt from each other. This gave them hope and an understanding that, even though there may be people going through the same problems as they are, they still need to face life alone. The women reported feeling a sense of self-worth from helping others, which contributed to rebuilding their self-esteem. These results indicate that support groups can be therapeutic for the people involved. They can be used to guide support group facilitators with regards to what to look for when facilitating groups. They can also assist policy makers in developing guidelines for the facilitation of support groups in order for the participants to obtain maximum benefit from their support group experience. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2009. / Psychology / unrestricted
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Reproductive aspirations and intentions of young women living with HIV, in two South African townships /Farlane, Lindiwe. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009. / Full text also available online. Scroll down for electronic link.
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Reproductive aspirations and intentions of young women living with HIV, in two South African townships.Farlane, Lindiwe. January 2009 (has links)
South Africa has an estimated population of approximately 47. 9 million of which almost (51%) are female; according to the 2007 mid-year report of Statistics South Africa (Stats-SA, 2007). The availability of Antiretroviral (ARVs) that delay HIV progression and improve quality of life of HIV infected individuals and the roll-out of prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) have brought renewed hope among many couples and individuals in South Africa. The four pillars of the Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT) programme include prevention of HIV infection among young women, prevention of un-intended pregnancies among HIV infected women, prevention of HIV infection to the child and provision of care and support services. HIV-positive young women live by socially and medically constructed values that expect them to avoid becoming pregnant, but at the same time they are expected to marry and bear children. A more in-depth understanding of the reproductive decision making experiences of women below the age of 35 is needed because they are at reproductive age and most at risk of HIV infection in South Africa. The impact of a positive HIV diagnosis may be best understood when viewed within a social constructivist framework. A few studies in South Africa (Cooper et al, 2005; Harries et al, 2007; Myer, Morroni, and Rebe, 2007; Orner et al, 2007; Stevens, 2008) have been conducted on fertility desires of HIV positive individuals and couples although not specifically exploring young women who are mostly vulnerable to HIV infection. Recognizing the gap in the desired public health care objectives, such as preventing mother to child transmission of HIV and the lived experiences of young women living with HIV, this qualitative exploratory research was conducted in two South African Townships. The purpose was to explore the reproductive aspirations and intentions of the women below the age of 35, in the light of the higher HIV prevalence in this population, compared to other groups. The research explored two theories of human behaviour; the theory of planned behaviour and Erick Erikson’s human developmental theory. Eleven semi-structured in-depth interviews and two focus group discussions were conducted through support groups at clinics in Soweto and Attridgeville. Ethical approval was obtained from the University of KwaZulu-Natal and all participants signed consent to participate in the research. Findings showed that women younger than 30 who did not have a child, desired and intended to have biological children. Health concerns such as CD4 count, concerns about HIV progression, early death and orphan-hood, previous loss of a child due to HIV and financial concerns were often cited. Tied to this were health workers’ attitudes towards pregnancy among women who knew their HIV status. Women said that a child brought joy, strength and courage to the mother and was seen as an image, when the mother dies, due to HIV. Almost all the women were in support groups that openly discouraged pregnancy among HIV positive women, especially those who already have a child or children. This research indicates that in practice, counselling and information around reproductive health and choices, is often offered in a quest to dissuade HIV-infected women from considering pregnancy. Health services, families and partners, as well as past experiences of motherhood, all play a role in decision making (Cooper et al, 2005). Sometimes policy guidelines alone are not enough to ensure that reproductive rights of women living with HIV are respected at the different levels. This research points out the population of women who have specific needs and who should not be treated as a homogenous group with all women. This recognition should go beyond policy recommendations into implementation and monitoring. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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A critical ethnography of HIV-positive women attending public health care facilities in GautengDu Plessis, Gretchen Erika January 2008 (has links)
Women living with HIV have a variety of reproductive health and psychosocial needs. The purpose of this critical ethnographic study was to examine how HIV, empowerment and reproduction are experienced by a volunteer sample of HIVpositive women attending public health care facilities in Gauteng. Feminist and critical approaches were used to guide the methodology of the research and the interpretation of the findings. Data were collected through in-depth interviews and observation. An overview of literature pertaining to the social construction of HIV-AIDS, women’s empowerment and reproductive decision-making is presented. A discourse of “healthy lifestyle” as technologies of the self is considered. Women’s empowerment as an ideal is described and structural barriers to its achievement are discussed. Stigma and discrimination as products of hegemony are discussed as important issues in the disempowerment of women living with HIV. HIV-AIDS as illness experience is reviewed with reference to the social context and to the individual context. Reproductive decision-making models and theories are critically analysed for their applicability to women living with HIV. The need for a conceptual shift in the notion of empowerment in order to understand constrained decision-making for women living with HIV is propagated. The stories of women living with HIV and dependent on public health care services are presented. Through the principles of a critical ethnography the lived experiences of these women are described by means of emerging themes. A historiography of family planning and HIV-AIDS services throws the narrations of the research participants into broader historic relief. Findings revealed that biomedical hegemonic power contoured and marked the lived experiences of women following an HIV-positive diagnosis. Taken-for-granted views of passivity and of own responsibilities regarding reproductive health are challenged. The women in the study were dependent upon public health care personnel for treatment, testing, dietary advice/supplementation and recommendations for a social xii disability grant. ARV-treatment was regarded as a low point in the illness career. All of the participants reported that the overriding problems in their lives were having too few material resources and not having the means to change this. This made them vulnerable to compounded health problems and decreased their ability to voice their own opinions about treatment. They did not regard themselves as having been at risk for contracting HIV and some harboured resentment towards men who were seen as being absolved from testing and responsibilities towards female partners, born and unborn children. Women who were not tested as part of antenatal sentinel groups tended to suffer symptoms of ill health for some time prior to being tested for HIV. Social support systems were either absent or consisted of trusted family members and friends. In many cases, women became the silent care-givers for those affected and infected by HIV. Anticipated stigma permeated the participants’ narrations of living with HIV and disclosure of their statuses was difficult. The use of male condoms, stressed during counselling sessions, was narrated as a difficult burden for women to bear. Although the research participants expressed low fertility preferences, HIV-AIDS was seen as disrupting the link between heterosexual conjugal relations and the taken-for-grantedness of procreation. HIV-AIDS also disrupted norms in infant feeding practices and bottle-feeding was regarded as a sign of possible HIV-infection and hidden. The research participants were not empowered with knowledge about how to deal with side-effects, condom failures and the reluctance of male partners to be tested for HIV. They enacted, resisted and lived with HIV in different ways, incorporating some of the biomedically prescribed posturing as women living positively and blending it with stigma-negating performances and gender-prescribed ways of dressing, walking and acting. Participation in a support group validated their experiences and promoted positive self-perception. The formation of a collective voice in the support group was hampered by irregular attendance, the interference of community leaders and horizontal violence. Power relations, yielded by biomedical hegemony, androcentric sociocultural practices, material deprivation, fear, discrimination and stigma potentially undermined the women’s abilities to become empowered. Expansion of choices in various spheres or fields and collective action xiii are proposed as dimensions to be added to an empowerment-of-women approach to the problems of reproductive health in the age of HIV-AIDS. The contribution of the study as an emancipatory project is evaluated and implications for policy and practice are suggested. On a methodological level, this study is a demonstration of the contribution to be made by a micro-level, critical analysis to the body of knowledge about female reproductive health in the era of HIV-AIDS in South Africa. On a theoretical level, this study contributes to a wider conceptualisation of women’s empowerment by recognising the interplay between micro-level elements of situated experience, knowledge and preferences and the macro-level elements of sociocultural, biomedical and material influences on health and reproductive behavior.
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The loneliness of HIV-infected low-income mothers : implications for health workersDe Villiers, Elsa Herbst 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2001. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In a qualitative study, a convenience sampling technique was used to ensure a
study population of eleven HIV-infected low-income women. These participants
were all direct referrals from municipal clinics and the provincial hospital. The
criteria for participation were HIV sero-positivity and being a mother of a child or
children. Semi-structured open-ended individual interviews were conducted,
transcribed and then analysed, using grounded theory. Additional data were
gained by using a standardised psychological measure, the Revised UCLA
Loneliness Scale (RULS). The two main types of loneliness that these women
experienced were loneliness of emotional isolation and loneliness of social
isolation. These terms can be defined as the absence of a close emotional
attachment and lack of support and understanding of intimate others (emotional
isolation) and the absence of an accessible and engaging social network and lack
of social support and acceptance (social isolation). The most significant causes of
loneliness for these women were stigmatisation; fear and/or shame of rejection
and victimisation; fear of losing custody or care of their children; fear of losing
financial and emotional support; and using secrecy and non-disclosure as main
coping strategy for their emotional and physical safety. Experiences of emotional
isolation were also provoked or enhanced by the lack of involvement and support
from their partners and the partners' denial of the illness and its consequences.
Experiences of social isolation were also caused or increased by the general lack of
HIV/AIDS information, education and support services. Significantly, it was found
that for most of the women the psychological effect of loneliness was primarily a
depressed mood as well as using negative coping mechanisms, such as alcohol
abuse and further withdrawal from important others. The psychosocial needs of these women were also significantly similar. Broad guidelines are offered for
health workers in assisting/supporting HIV-infected low-income mothers in
general, based on the core needs of the women in this study; to be listened to
and heard, understanding and acceptance, and social support. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In 'n kwalitatiewe studie is 'n gerieflikheidsteekproeftegniek gebruik om 'n
studiepopulasie van elf MIV-geïnfekteerde lae-inkomste-vroue te verseker. Hierdie
deelnemers was almal direkte verwysings van munisipale klinieke en die
provinsiale hospitaal. Die kriteria vir deelname was MIV-sero-positiwiteit en
moeder wees van 'n kind of kinders. Semigestruktureerde oop individuele
onderhoude is gevoer, getranskribeer en toe ontleed deur gegronde teorie te
gebruik. Bykomende data is verkry met behulp van 'n gestandaardiseerde
psigometriese instrument, die "Revised UCLA Loneliness Scale (RULS)". Die twee
hooftipes eensaamheid wat hierdie vroue ervaar het was eensaamheid van
emosionele isolasie en eensaamheid van sosiale isolasie. Hierdie terme kan
omskryf word as die afwesigheid van 'n nou emosionele band en gebrek aan
ondersteuning en begrip van intieme ander (emosionele isolasie) en die
afwesigheid van 'n toeganklike en inskakelende sosiale netwerk en gebrek aan
sosiale ondersteuning en aanvaarding (sosiale isolasie). Die beduidendste oorsake
van eensaamheid vir hierdie vroue was stigmatisasie; vrees en/of skaamte vir
verwerping en viktimisasie; vrees vir verlies van voogdyskap of sorg van hul
kinders; vrees vir die verlies van finansiële en emosionele ondersteuning; en die
gebruik van geheimhouding en nie-openbaarmaking as belangrikste
hanteringstrategie vir hul emosionele en fisieke veiligheid. Ervarings van
emosionele isolasie is ook uitgelok of versterk deur die gebrek aan betrokkenheid
en ondersteuning van hul lewensmaats en die lewensmaats se ontkenning van die
siekte en sy gevolge. Ervarings van sosiale isolasie is ook veroorsaak of verhoog
deur die algemene gebrek aan inligting, opvoeding en ondersteuningsdienste ten opsigte van MIVNIGS. 'n Betekenisvolle bevinding was dat vir die meeste van die
vroue die psigologiese effek van eensaamheid primêr 'n depressiewe
gemoedstemming was sowel as die gebruik van negatiewe hanteringstrategieë
soos alkoholmisbruik en verdere onttrekking van belangrike ander. Die
psigososiale behoeftes van hierdie vroue was ook beduidend eenders. Breë riglyne
word voorgestel vir gesondheidswerkers wat betref die bystaan/ondersteuning van
MIV-geïnfekteerde lae-inkomste-moeders in die algemeen, gebaseer op die
kernbehoeftes van die vroue in hierdie studie; om na geluister en gehoor te
word, begrip en aanvaarding, en sosiale ondersteuning.
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Female inequality and the spreading of HIV/AIDS – a gender-based studySöderström, Sara January 2006 (has links)
<p>The spreading of HIV/AIDS has a gendered dimension. In this essay I focus on the gender roles that create different spheres for the sexes and how they are connected to the spreading of HIV/AIDS. The construction of masculinity hinders the HIV preventing efforts due to the social demands of having several partners and the dislike of using condoms. Sometimes it also results in gender-based violence. The female gender role narrows the possibilities for women to protect themselves. The women are struck harder by the disease because they are in a disadvantageous position in society where they have few means of economic independence and no control over their own bodies in their sexual relationships. The key is to change the gendered domain and the attitudes toward both men and women.</p>
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Female inequality and the spreading of HIV/AIDS – a gender-based studySöderström, Sara January 2006 (has links)
The spreading of HIV/AIDS has a gendered dimension. In this essay I focus on the gender roles that create different spheres for the sexes and how they are connected to the spreading of HIV/AIDS. The construction of masculinity hinders the HIV preventing efforts due to the social demands of having several partners and the dislike of using condoms. Sometimes it also results in gender-based violence. The female gender role narrows the possibilities for women to protect themselves. The women are struck harder by the disease because they are in a disadvantageous position in society where they have few means of economic independence and no control over their own bodies in their sexual relationships. The key is to change the gendered domain and the attitudes toward both men and women.
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