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Sahara J (Online) ; 10(1): 32-41, 2010.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1271424

ABSTRACT

Early in the study of HIV/AIDS; culture was invoked to explain differences in the disease patterns between sub-Saharan Africa and Western countries. Unfortunately; in an attempt to explain the statistics; many of the presumed risk factors were impugned in the absence of evidence. Many cultural practices were stripped of their meanings; societal context and historical positioning and transformed into cofactors of disease. Other supposedly beneficial cultural traits were used to explain the absence of disease in certain populations; implicitly blaming victims in other groups. Despite years of study; assumptions about culture as a cofactor in the spread of HIV/AIDS have persisted; despite a lack of empirical evidence. In recent years; more and more ideas about cultural causality have been called into question; and often disproved by studies. Thus; in light of new evidence; a review of purported cultural causes of disease; enhanced by an understanding of the differences between individual and population risks; is both warranted and long overdue. The preponderance of evidence suggests that culture as a singular determinant in the African epidemic of HIV/AIDS falls flat when disabused of its biased and ethnocentric assumptions


Subject(s)
HIV , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , Culture , Disease Transmission, Infectious , Population Characteristics , Risk Factors
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