Recent Key Efforts to Improve HIV-Related Intersectional Stigma and Discrimination Research
American Journal of Public Health
; 112:S393-S394, 2022.
Article
in English
| ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2045598
ABSTRACT
[...]In 2020 the NIH Office of AIDS Research and the National Institute of Mental Health, Division of AIDS Research developed and Implemented a deliberative process to actively engage researchers, community members, and government officials In a rigorous review of the concepts, theories, measurements, and Interventions that address HIV-related Intersectional stigma and discrimination. The co-occurring amplification of the COVID-19 pandemic and persistent racial Injustices further exposed the Intersecting effects that racism, economic disenfranchisement, gender Inequity, heterosexism, and other forms of systemic discrimination have on people belonging to multiple socially oppressed groups and the reality that people experiencing multiple forms of oppression suffer the greatest harms to their health. Genuine community-based participatory approaches respect the Innate knowledge ofthe community with its inherent strengths and assets while engaging community members as partners to Inform the entire research process-from framing the research questions to designing, conducting, analyzing, and Interpreting findings- which benefits from research and community perspectives.
Medical Sciences; Racial justice; Mental health; Oppression; Gender inequality; Economic policy; Human immunodeficiency virus--HIV; Stigma; Health research; Public officials; COVID-19; Community; Discrimination; Acquired immune deficiency syndrome--AIDS; Community involvement; Medical research; Public health; Voting rights; Research design; Pandemics; Intersectionality; Racism; Disease prevention; Community research; Research methodology; Community participation; Heterosexism; Research; 92312:Administration of Public Health Programs
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Collection:
Databases of international organizations
Database:
ProQuest Central
Language:
English
Journal:
American Journal of Public Health
Year:
2022
Document Type:
Article
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