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Life kills : surviving the battles of everyday life in an age of HIV/AIDS

Thesis (MPhil (Sociology and Social Anthropology))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study gives us insight into the daily lives and battles for survival of poor women
in an age of HIV/AIDS in rural areas of the Western Cape, South Africa. I set out to
get an understanding of the shortcomings of the current interventions aimed at
combating HIV and AIDS. Soon after I commenced my fieldwork I realised that it is
the socio-economic circumstances of the people I encountered that was mostly
responsible for their HIV positive status or the reason why they are living with
HIV/AIDS rather than the choices they make. However, most of the interventions
aimed at combating the global HIV/AIDS epidemic focuses on behavioural
interventions or the provision of medical care. By entering the spheres in which
women living with HIV/AIDS live their daily lives I aimed to get a better
comprehension of the challenges they encounter and why the interventions that focus
on behaviour and medical treatment fail to address the needs of these women. In
doing so I learned about their struggles to merely stay alive and that protecting
yourself against a disease like HIV/AIDS can appear as a luxury. A luxury you
cannot afford when your only means of an income is your body which you need to
barter in exchange for money or food and shelter. I learned about their powerlessness
in protecting themselves against the disease and the loneliness they have to endure
once they learn they are infected with the virus. In addition to this, it also came to my
attention that their conditions of poverty are of such an extent that even ‘free’ medical
treatment can sometimes be too expensive for them to afford because of hidden costs
such as transport. At the end of my study it was my conclusion that we need to pay
more attention to the root causes of the spread of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in order to
combat it successfully, also at the entry levels of the healthcare system. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die studie bied insig in die daaglikese lewens en stryd om oorlewing van arm vroue
in ‘n tyd van MIV/VIGS in die landelike gebiede van die Wes-Kaap, Suid-Afrika. Ek
het die studie begin met ‘n poging om die tekortkominge van die huidige intervensies
om MIV/VIGS te bekamp beter te verstaan. Kort nadat ek met my veldwerk begin
het het ek reeds tot die besef gekom dat die die sosio-ekonomiese omstandigehede die
oorsaak is dat die vroue met die virus leef, eerder as die keuses wat hulle vrywilliglik
maak. Ten spyte van my bevinding fokus meeste intervensies tans op
gedragsveranderinge en mediese behandeling. Ek het die lewensruimtes van hierdie
vroue binnegegaan in ‘n poging om die daaglikse uitdagings te verstaan, asook die
redes hoekom die huidige intervensies nie hierdie vroue se behoeftes aanspreek nie.
Deur dit te doen het ek geleer hoe dit as ‘n luuksheid beskou kan word om jouself teen
infeksie met die virus te beskerm. ‘n Luuksheid wat jy nie kan bekostig indien jou lyf
jou enigste bron van inkomste is wat jy moet gebruik om geld mee in te win of kos en
woonplek te verseker nie. Vroue is dikwels magteloos om hulself teen infeksie met
MIV/VIGS te beskerm en die eensaamheid waarmee hul moet saamleef wanneer hul
wel met die virus ge-infekteer is. Dit het ook onder my aandag gekom dat die
armoede van so ‘n aard is dat selfs ‘gratis’ mediese behandeling soms onbekostigbaar
is as gevolg van versteekte kostes, soos vervoer. Aan die einde van my studie was dit
my gevolgtrekking dat daar meer aandag geskenk moet word aan die oorsake wat
aanleiding gee tot die verspreiding van die MIV/VIGS epidemie indien ons dit
suksesvol wil bekamp, ook op die intreevlakke van die gesondheidstelsel.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:sun/oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/5219
Date12 1900
CreatorsHuman, Johanna S.
ContributorsRobins, Steven L., University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Sociology and Social Anthropology
PublisherStellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageUnknown
TypeThesis
Format130 p.
RightsUniversity of Stellenbosch

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