Under the umbrella of the
Bill and Melinda Gates-funded HIV initiative in India, the Mysore-based sex
workers' (SWs) collective Ashodaya Samithi focused on improving its members'
living and working conditions through community-led structural interventions,
including community mobilisation, advocacy, peer-led support, and health
promotional activities.
Based on four months of ethnographic fieldwork, this
article examines the care and support activities of one of its sub-wings,
Ashraya, which specifically focuses on people living with HIV and AIDS (PLHIV).
We first discuss the stigma-related perceptions and experiences of participants
in relation to health-care settings and work environment, families and
communities, and within varied HIV support networks. We then explore how
Ashraya's community-led interventions attempt to challenge the structural
forces feeding on and creating stigma.
We argue that the current policy focus
on the involvement of SWs' collectives in sexually transmitted infection (STI)
prevention in India is rather limited and should be expanded along the
continuum of care and support offered to PLHIV. As suggested in this paper,
SWs' organisations may have greater potential to contribute to more than STI
prevention work, both within and outside their communities, than currently
recognised.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/Y2uIjY
By: Chevrier C1, Khan S2, Reza-Paul S1, Lorway R1.
- 1a Department of Community Health Sciences , University of Manitoba , Winnipeg , Canada.
- 2b Department of Communication , University of Texas , San Antonio , TX , USA.
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