Illness and other assaults on self: the relative impact of HIV/AIDS on women's lives

Authors
Citation
D. Ciambrone, Illness and other assaults on self: the relative impact of HIV/AIDS on women's lives, SOCIOL HEAL, 23(4), 2001, pp. 517-540
Citations number
71
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS
ISSN journal
01419889 → ACNP
Volume
23
Issue
4
Year of publication
2001
Pages
517 - 540
Database
ISI
SICI code
0141-9889(200107)23:4<517:IAOAOS>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Based on interviews with 37 women with HIV infection, this paper explores w omen's perceptions of HIV/AIDS in relation to other traumatic life events. Employing a biographical disruption framework, this paper demonstrates how women reconstruct the meaning of HIV infection in light of other disruptive life situations. Findings indicate that despite initial disruption, in ret rospect, many of the sample women did not consider HIV to be the most devas tating event in their lives. Rather, violence, mother-child separation, and drug use were deemed more disruptive than HIV infection. Several factors, including race, drug use and abuse histories, social support and diagnosis, were central to women's differential assessment of HIV in relation to othe r disruptive events. Results are discussed in terms of the practical and th eoretical implications of the analysis.