Stigma and HIV/AIDS
Stigma is a mark of shame or discredit upon a person or group. It can
manifest itself in a variety of ways, from ignoring the needs of a person or
group to psychologically or physically harming those who are stigmatized.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Real Life HIV Experiences
How does a teenager end up infected with HIV? How do you still have sex? What do
they have to do to stay alive? Three young people who it happened to tell all.
They talk about discrimination and stigma, and having safe sex.
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HIV/AIDS has been a highly stigmatized illness because of its
associations with sexual and drug use behavior and, often, the fact that in
many places it disproportionately affects those considered outside the
so-called mainstream of society—including men who have sex with men (MSM),
sex workers, injection drug users (IDUs), and migrant populations.
Stigma can cause people to perceive individuals with or at risk for HIV
as the other ("them"), reinforcing the feeling that HIV "couldn't happen to
me." Failure to address stigma can deter individuals from seeking voluntary
counseling and testing for HIV and proper medical care.
Carrying condoms may
be stigmatized by those who view it as evidence of "loose" morals.
Stigma can also perpetuate harmful practices, such as
discrimination against or poor treatment of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHA), MSM, IDUs,
or sex workers. Programs that fail to address stigma help perpetuate
discriminatory laws and practices and, in some cases, result in failure to
enforce laws against them.
Next: Stigma and discrimination
against those with HIV and AIDS
Last updated: 10/05
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