Promoting Dialogue Between Anthropologists and NGOs? (original) (raw)

Governing HIV in China: Commercial Sex, Homosexuality and Rural-to-Urban Migration

2017

Program 3 China's Condom Use Program and the Media 4 Changing Policies on Prostitution, Censorship and Disease Control 5 Health Interventions Focused on Sex Workers 6 Men Who Have Sex With Men 7 Rural-to-urban Migrant Labourers 8 Afterword: Ending AIDS? transfusions; and, in January 1983, the CDC reported cases of AIDS in female sexual partners of males with AIDS. Shortly after the discovery of HIV and the virus' transmission routes, the World Health Organization (WHO) held its first meeting to assess the AIDS situation in October 1983, and began international surveillance resulting in the formation of a United Nations (UN) system on AIDS (Ibid.). The Global Program on AIDS was launched in 1987 to raise public awareness of AIDS, promote research, encourage the participation of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in AIDS-related efforts, champion the rights of people living with HIV, and provide policy, technical and financial support to countries around the world. In 1996, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) was established to advocate for global action on the AIDS epidemic. UNAIDS now heads an international program that aims to unite the UN system, national governments, the private sector, NGOs, and people most affected by or living with HIV, in innovative partnerships to achieve universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support services. The UN's current mission of ending the AIDS epidemic as a global health threat by 2030, as affirmed in the June 2016 Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS, involves 'fast-tracking' national health policies to reduce the prevalence of HIV among key and vulnerable populations (United Nations General Assembly 2016). Key populations include sex workers, men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs using non-sterile equipment; transgender people and people in prisons comprise recent additions (WHO 2014, 2015; UNAIDS 2015b: 8). These groups of people are defined as key to the epidemic's dynamics, and hence international and national responses. Key populations are viewed as facing increased risk, vulnerability and burden with respect to HIV and AIDS due to a combination of biological, socioeconomic and structural factors. Yet they often have the least access to prevention and treatment services because their behaviours are stigmatized or even criminalized. Vulnerable populations such as women, migrants and mobile workers do not necessarily face the same

Providing HIV-related services in China for men who have sex with men

Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 2016

In China, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care provided by community-based organizations and the public sector are not well integrated. A community-based organization and experts from the Guangzhou Center for Disease Control and Prevention developed internet-based services for men who have sex with men, in Guangzhou, China. The internet services were linked to clinical services offering HIV testing and care. The expanding HIV epidemic among men who have sex with men is a public health problem in China. HIV control and prevention measures are implemented primarily through the public system. Only a limited number of community organizations are involved in providing HIV services. The programme integrated community and public sector HIV services including health education, online HIV risk assessment, on-site HIV counselling and testing, partner notification, psychosocial care and support, counting of CD4+ T-lymphocytes and treatment guidance. The internet can facilitate HIV preventio...

Qualitative exploration of HIV-related sexual behaviours and multiple partnerships among Chinese men who have sex with men living in a rural area of Yunnan Province, China

Sexual Health, 2013

The HIV epidemic has been spreading rapidly among men who have sex with men (MSM) in China. The present study explored the pattern of HIV-related high-risk sexual practices among MSM in a rural Chinese setting. Methods: Data were collected by semistructured in-depth interviews conducted among 15 MSM in Yuxi Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China. Fifteen respondents were recruited through a local non-governmental organisation via purposive sampling. Thematic analysis was used. Results: Technological changes, risk behaviours, social stigma and high migration rates have played a significant role in the spread of HIV among MSM in rural China. The Internet has become the primary channel for soliciting casual sex partners in the MSM community. Bisexuality and having concurrent and multiple sexual partners were common among rural MSM. A large number of sexual partners and low condom use in all MSM partnership types were noted. Due to Chinese cultural traditions and social stigma, Chinese rural MSM were reluctant to disclose their homosexuality. Rural-to-urban migrant MSM were often engaged in the commercial sex trade. Conclusions: Rural MSM is a distinctive and complex population with multiple identities in China. Concurrent multiple sexual partnerships, high mobility and low disclosure rate are the major challenges for HIV prevention and intervention programs in MSM.

HIV prevalence trends, risky behaviours, and governmental and community responses to the epidemic among men who have sex with men in China

BioMed research international, 2014

Numerous studies reported the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS epidemic among men who have sex with men (MSM) in China. This paper aims to investigate the overall epidemic trend and associated high-risk behaviours among Chinese MSM and to explore the governmental and community responses to the epidemic. HIV prevalence among Chinese MSM increased rapidly in all Chinese regions in the past decade and disproportionally affected the Southwest China. In addition to the high-risk homosexual behaviours, overlapping bisexual, commercial, and drug use behaviours are commonly observed among Chinese MSM. The Chinese government has significantly expanded the surveillance efforts among MSM over the past decade. Community responses against HIV have been substantially strengthened with the support of international aid. However, lack of enabling legal and financial environment undermines the role of community-based organisations (CBOs) in HIV surveillance and prevention. HIV continues to spread rapidly amo...

Safer sex practices among newly diagnosed HIV-positive men who have sex with men in China: results from an ethnographic study

International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being

The study reported here sought to understand the rationales of safer sex practices adopted by newly diagnosed HIV-positive men who have sex with men (MSM). Guided by a socio-ecological framework, an ethnography was conducted among newly diagnosed HIV-positive MSM. Indepth interviews and participant observation were employed to produce an account of the social and cultural settings that was faithful to the perspectives of participants. A total of 31 participants with diverse backgrounds were recruited in a southern city of China. Participant observation was conducted in local healthcare settings, MSM venues, and NGO offices. Most participants (24/31) reported stopping unprotected anal intercourse (UAI) immediately after being diagnosed as HIV-positive. Factors associated with safer sex practices were identified at both individual and environmental levels, including self-protection, establishment of selfesteem, dignity, altruism and reciprocity, disease experience as a source of personal growth, and organizational culture and values. Newly diagnosed HIV-positive MSM navigate their sexual practices within the context of multiple competing factors. Implications for sustained behaviour change enabling safer sex practices include stimulating survival instinct, facilitating safer sex decision making, motivating and facilitating personal growth, and encouraging volunteerism to promote intentional activities for safer sex practices.

Sociocultural Contexts and Communication about Sex in China: Informing HIV/STD Prevention Programs

Aids Education and Prevention, 2009

HIV may be particularly stigmatizing in Asia because of its association with "taboo" topics, including sex, drugs, homosexuality, and death . These cultural schemata expose salient boundaries and moral implications for sexual communication (Chin, 1999, Social Science and Medicine, 49, 241-251). Yet HIV/STD prevention efforts are frequently conducted in the public realm. Education strategies often involve conversations with health "experts" about condom use, safe sex, and partner communication. The gap between the public context of intervention efforts and the private and norm-bound nature of sex conversation is particularly challenging. Interviews with 32 market workers in eastern China focused on knowledge, beliefs, and values surrounding sexual practices, meanings, and communication. Sextalk taboos, information seeking, vulnerability, partner communication, and cultural change emerged as central to understanding intervention information flow and each theme's relative influence is described. Findings illustrate the nature of how sexual communication schemata in Chinese contexts impact the effectiveness of sexual health message communication.