The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe

The African continent has been hit the hardest by the HIV/AIDS epidemic which has seen more women becoming infected than men (Hunter, 2003; UNAIDS, 2004). This has been attributed to the permissible nature of the African culture which is lenient on male promiscuity (Foreman, 1999; Colvin 2000; Lecle...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kambarami, Maureen Cresencia
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Fort Hare 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10353/231
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ufh-vital-11757
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ufh-vital-117572017-12-21T04:22:52ZThe experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, ZimbabweKambarami, Maureen CresenciaRural women -- ZimbabwePromiscuity -- ZimbabweHIV-positive women -- ZimbabweAIDS (Disease) in women -- ZimbabweThe African continent has been hit the hardest by the HIV/AIDS epidemic which has seen more women becoming infected than men (Hunter, 2003; UNAIDS, 2004). This has been attributed to the permissible nature of the African culture which is lenient on male promiscuity (Foreman, 1999; Colvin 2000; Leclerc-Madlala 2001; Dube 2003). African women are not only vulnerable to infection but are also vulnerable to negative disclosure experiences when they disclose their status to sexual partners. This double impact of culture has not been addressed by past researches (UNAIDS 2004). The present research thus attempts to fill that gap. It explores the interplay between culture and HIV transmission as well as the interplay between culture and disclosure experiences. The study’s setting is Magunje Township, a rural village in Mashonaland Central province in Zimbabwe. Taking into consideration the limitations of the present analysis, data gathered indicates that African women are vulnerable to both HIV infection and negative disclosure experiences. Their vulnerability also hampers prevention and treatment efforts as it makes them decide to keep their status a secret from sexual partners for fear of losing the financial income tied to sexual partners. The present researcher concludes with some suggestions for policy makers and programme implementers, highlighting the importance of focusing on HIV/AIDS status disclosure as a prevention and treatment method in the absence of a cure for HIV.University of Fort HareFaculty of Social Sciences & Humanities2009ThesisMastersM SWix, 182 leaves; 30 cmpdfvital:11757http://hdl.handle.net/10353/231EnglishUniversity of Fort Hare
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Rural women -- Zimbabwe
Promiscuity -- Zimbabwe
HIV-positive women -- Zimbabwe
AIDS (Disease) in women -- Zimbabwe
spellingShingle Rural women -- Zimbabwe
Promiscuity -- Zimbabwe
HIV-positive women -- Zimbabwe
AIDS (Disease) in women -- Zimbabwe
Kambarami, Maureen Cresencia
The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
description The African continent has been hit the hardest by the HIV/AIDS epidemic which has seen more women becoming infected than men (Hunter, 2003; UNAIDS, 2004). This has been attributed to the permissible nature of the African culture which is lenient on male promiscuity (Foreman, 1999; Colvin 2000; Leclerc-Madlala 2001; Dube 2003). African women are not only vulnerable to infection but are also vulnerable to negative disclosure experiences when they disclose their status to sexual partners. This double impact of culture has not been addressed by past researches (UNAIDS 2004). The present research thus attempts to fill that gap. It explores the interplay between culture and HIV transmission as well as the interplay between culture and disclosure experiences. The study’s setting is Magunje Township, a rural village in Mashonaland Central province in Zimbabwe. Taking into consideration the limitations of the present analysis, data gathered indicates that African women are vulnerable to both HIV infection and negative disclosure experiences. Their vulnerability also hampers prevention and treatment efforts as it makes them decide to keep their status a secret from sexual partners for fear of losing the financial income tied to sexual partners. The present researcher concludes with some suggestions for policy makers and programme implementers, highlighting the importance of focusing on HIV/AIDS status disclosure as a prevention and treatment method in the absence of a cure for HIV.
author Kambarami, Maureen Cresencia
author_facet Kambarami, Maureen Cresencia
author_sort Kambarami, Maureen Cresencia
title The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
title_short The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
title_full The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
title_fullStr The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed The experiences of women of their HIV/AIDS status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of Magunje township, Zimbabwe
title_sort experiences of women of their hiv/aids status disclosure to sexual partners: an exploratory study of magunje township, zimbabwe
publisher University of Fort Hare
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10353/231
work_keys_str_mv AT kambaramimaureencresencia theexperiencesofwomenoftheirhivaidsstatusdisclosuretosexualpartnersanexploratorystudyofmagunjetownshipzimbabwe
AT kambaramimaureencresencia experiencesofwomenoftheirhivaidsstatusdisclosuretosexualpartnersanexploratorystudyofmagunjetownshipzimbabwe
_version_ 1718565843221086208