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AIDS and Stigma.
Subject(s):
STIGMA (Social psychology); AIDS
(Disease) -- Patients -- Social conditions
Source:
American Behavioral Scientist, Apr99,
Vol. 42 Issue 7, p1106, 11p
Author(s):
HEREK, GREGORY M.
Abstract:
Discusses AIDS-related stigma, which is
a discrimination directed at people perceived to have AIDS or HIV. Manifestations of AIDS stigma
in the United States; Effects of the stigma; Conclusion.
AIDS AND STIGMA
This article briefly reviews current
knowledge about AIDS-related stigma, defined as prejudice, discounting,
discrediting, and discrimination directed at people perceived to have
AIDS or HIV, and the individuals, groups, and communities with which
they are associated. AIDS stigma has been manifested in discrimination,
violence, and personal rejection of people with AIDS (PWAs). Whereas the
characteristics of AIDS as an illness probably make some degree of
stigma inevitable, AIDS has also been used as a symbol for expressing
negative attitudes toward groups disproportionately affected by the
epidemic, especially gay men and injecting drug users (IDUs). AIDS
stigma affects the well-being of PWAs and influences their personal
choices about disclosing their serostatus to others. It also affects
PWAs' loved ones and their caregivers, both volunteers and
professionals. Stigma has hindered society's response to the epidemic,
and may continue to have an impact as policies providing special
protection to people with HIV face renewed scrutiny.
Ever since the first cases were
detected in the United States in 1981, people with AIDS (PWAs) have been
the targets of stigma. Press accounts and anecdotal reports from the
early 1980s told stories of PWAs--as well as those simply suspected of
having the disease--being evicted from their homes, fired from their
jobs, and shunned by family and friends. Early surveys of public opinion
revealed widespread fear of the disease, lack of accurate information
about its transmission, and willingness to support draconian public
policies that would restrict civil liberties in the name of fighting
AIDS (Altman, 1986; Blake & Arkin, 1988; Clendinen, 1983; Herek, 1990).
After nearly two decades of extensive
public education about HIV, one could hope that AIDS-related prejudice
and discrimination would now be relics of the past. Unfortunately, this
is not the case. In 1998, an 8-year-old New York girl was unable to find
a Girl Scout troop that would admit her once her HIV infection was
disclosed ("HIV-positive girl," 1998). In a 1997 national telephone
survey, more than one fourth of the U.S. public expressed discomfort
about associating with a PWA in a variety of circumstances (Herek &
Capitanio, 1998). In 1996, federal legislation was enacted that singled
out HIV-positive military personnel for discharge while ignoring other
active-duty personnel with comparable serious medical conditions (Shenon,
1996).
Nor is the problem of AIDS stigma
confined to the United States. In South Africa, an HIV-infected
volunteer recently was beaten to death by neighbors who accused her of
bringing shame on their community by revealing her HIV infection
(McNeil, 1998). In India, AIDS workers report that people with HIV have
become new untouchables who are often shunned by medical workers,
neighbors, and employers (Burns, 1996). In rural Tanzania, having AIDS
is often attributed to witchcraft and PWAs are frequently blamed for
their disease (Nnko, 1998).
These are examples of AIDS-related
stigma, a term that refers to prejudice, discounting, discrediting, and
discrimination directed at people perceived to have AIDS or HIV, and the
individuals, groups, and communities with which they are associated (Herek
et al., 1998; see also Alonzo & Reynolds, 1995; Crawford, 1996; Herek,
1990; Pryor & Reeder, 1993). This article briefly describes current
knowledge about AIDS-related stigma (or simply AIDS stigma) in the
United States. It is not intended to provide a thorough literature
review, but instead highlights some major findings about AIDS stigma and
cites representative studies.
MANIFESTATIONS OF AIDS STIGMA IN THE
UNITED STATES
AIDS is a global pandemic, and persons
with HIV (PWHIVs) are stigmatized throughout the world to varying
degrees. AIDS stigma around the world is expressed through social
ostracism and personal rejection of PWHIVs, discrimination against them,
and laws that deprive them of basic human rights (Mann, Tarantola, &
Netter, 1992; Panos Institute, 1990). Although AIDS stigma is
effectively universal, it takes different forms from one country to
another and its specific targets vary considerably. This variation is
shaped in each society by multiple factors, including the local
epidemiology of HIV and preexisting prejudices within the culture. A
consistent pattern is that stigma is often expressed against unpopular
groups disproportionately affected by the local epidemic (Goldin, 1994;
Mann et al., 1992; Panos Institute, 1990; Sabatier, 1988).
In the United States, a significant
minority of the public has consistently expressed negative attitudes
toward PWAs since the epidemic began and has supported authoritarian and
punitive measures against them, including quarantine, universal
mandatory testing, and even tattooing of infected individuals. Such
attitudes have fluctuated in their prevalence, with support for punitive policies highest in the late 1980s
(e.g., Blake & Arkin, 1988; Blendon & Donelan, 1988; Blendon, Donelan, &
Knox, 1992; Herek, 1997; Herek & Capitanio, 1993; Herek & Glunt, 1991;
Rogers, Singer, & Imperio, 1993; Schneider, 1987; Singer & Rogers, 1986;
Stipp & Kerr, 1989).
Although diminished, many of the same
attitudes persist today. In a 1997 national telephone survey, intentions
to avoid PWAs in various situations and support for measures such as
quarantine were lower than in previous years (Herek & Capitanio, 1998).
Compared to a similar survey conducted
in 1991, however, more respondents in 1997 overestimated the risks of
HIV transmission through casual contact and perceived PWAs as deserving
their condition. Approximately one third expressed discomfort and
negative feelings toward PWAs (for more findings from the survey, see
Capitanio & Herek, 1999 [this issue]; Herek & Capitanio, 1999 [this
issue]).
AIDS-related discrimination in
employment, health care, insurance, education, and other realms has been
widely reported since the early days of the epidemic. PWAs have been
fired from their jobs, evicted from their homes, and denied services
(e.g., Gostin, 1990; Hunter & Rubenstein, 1992). Discrimination
continues to occur despite legal precedents and protective legislation
(e.g., Burris, 1999 [this issue]; Gostin & Webber, 1998).
Stigma is manifested in its most
extreme form when people perceived to be infected with HIV are
physically attacked. In a 1992 survey of 1,800 people with HIV, 21% of
respondents reported that they had experienced violence in their
communities because of their HIV status (National Association of People
With AIDS, 1992; see also National Workshop on HIV and Violence, 1996).
THE
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF AIDS STIGMA
A considerable amount of empirical
research has focused on attitudes of the uninfected toward PWHIVs and
AIDS-related policies. In these studies, AIDS stigma is conceptualized
as a psychological attitude or a facet of public opinion. Even a cursory
examination of the literature in this area quickly reveals that
AIDS-related attitudes have been conceptualized in many different ways,
including affective reactions to PWAs, attributions of blame and
responsibility to PWAs, willingness to interact with PWAs, and attitudes
toward laws and public policies related to AIDS (e.g., Capitanio & Herek,
1999; Herek & Capitanio, 1999; Pryor, Reeder, & Landau, 1999 [this
issue]).
A variety of social, psychological, and
demographic variables have been found to correlate with AIDS-related
attitudes. Among the most consistent correlates have been age,
education, personal contact with PWAs, knowledge about HIV transmission,
and attitudes toward homosexuality (e.g., Gerbert, Sumser, & Maguire,
1991; Herek & Capitanio, 1997; Price & Hsu, 1992; Stipp & Kerr, 1989).
Younger and better-educated respondents consistently manifest lower
levels of AIDS stigma than older respondents and those with lower levels
of education. Similarly, uninfected people who personally know a PWA
generally manifest less AIDS stigma than others. Attitudes toward PWAs
tend to be more favorable and attitudes toward AIDS-related policies
less restrictive to the extent that respondents have more favorable
attitudes toward gay people and are knowledgeable about the lack of risk
of HIV transmission through casual social contact (Capitanio & Herek,
1999; Herek & Capitanio, 1999; Pry or et al., 1999).
Some data reveal racial and ethnic
differences in AIDS stigma. Members of racial and ethnic minority
groups--mainly African Americans and Hispanic Americans--appear more
likely than non-Hispanic White Americans to overestimate the risks of
HIV transmission through casual contact and to endorse policies that
would separate PWAs from others (Alcalay, Sniderman, Mitchell, &
Griffin, 1989-1990; Herek & Capitanio, 1993, 1997, 1998; Herek & Glunt,
1991; McCaig, Hardy, & Winn, 1991). Such patterns may reflect
differences in the credibility that minority group members attach to
official AIDS information (Herek & Capitanio, 1994), which in turn have
multiple cultural and historical roots (e.g., Herek & Glunt, 1993;
Stevenson, 1994; Turner, 1993).
In trying to explain the social
psychology of AIDS stigma, it is useful to recognize that, as a disease,
AIDS manifests at least four characteristics likely to evoke stigma (Goffman,
1963; Jones et al., 1984). First, stigma is more often attached to a
disease whose cause is perceived to be the bearer's responsibility. To
the extent that an illness is perceived as having been contracted
through voluntary and avoidable behaviors--especially if such behaviors
evoke social disapproval--it is likely to be stigmatized and to evoke
anger and moralism rather than pity or empathy (Weiner, 1993). Thus,
because the primary transmission routes for HIV are behaviors that are
widely considered voluntary and immoral, PWHIVs are regarded by a
significant portion of the public as responsible for their condition and
consequently are stigmatized (e.g., Herek & Capitanio, 1999).
Second, greater stigma is associated
with illnesses and conditions that are unalterable or degenerative.
Since the earliest days of the epidemic, AIDS has been widely perceived
to be a fatal condition (Blake & Arkin, 1988). Being diagnosed with such
a disease is often regarded as equivalent to dying, and those who are
diagnosed may represent a reminder--or even the personification--of
death and mortality (e.g., Stoddard, 1994). New drug regimens have
offered realistic hope that HIV disease may be transformed from a fatal
malady to a chronic illness. Those medicines, however, are not effective
for all who take them, and many PWHIVs do not have access to antiviral
drugs. Thus, despite the development of increasingly effective
therapies, AIDS will probably continue to be perceived as a fatal
disease by most of the U.S. public for the foreseeable future.
Third, greater stigma is associated
with conditions that are perceived to be contagious or to place others
in harm's way. Perceptions of danger and fears of contagion have
surrounded AIDS since the beginning of the epidemic (Herek, 1990), and
are evident in Americans' continuing overestimation of the risks posed
by casual contact (Herek & Capitanio, 1998, 1999). Fourth, a condition
tends to be more stigmatized when it is readily apparent to others--when
it actually disrupts a social interaction or is perceived by others as
repellent, ugly, or upsetting. In this regard, the advanced stages of
AIDS often dramatically affect an individual's physical appearance and
stamina, evoking distress and stigma from observers (e.g., Klitzman,
1997).
Given these characteristics, AIDS
probably would have evoked stigma regardless of its specific
epidemiology and social history. Yet the character of AIDS stigma in the
United States derives from the widely perceived association between HIV
and particular sectors of the population, especially gay and bisexual
men and injecting drug users (IDUs). Recognizing this fact, social
psychologists have postulated several theories of AIDS stigma (Herek,
1999; Pry or et al., 1999). Many of these models describe two sources
for individuals' attitudes: (a) fear of AIDS as an illness and an
accompanying desire to protect oneself from it, and (b) symbolic
associations between AIDS and groups identified with the disease.
Instrumental AIDS stigma results from
the communicability and lethality of HIV. It reflects the fear and
apprehension likely to be associated with any transmissible and deadly
illness. It is perhaps best illustrated by the experiences of people who
acquired HIV through receiving blood products. Compared to gay men and
drug users, such individuals were not previously highly stigmatized by
society (although many faced some degree of illness-related stigma).
After the onset of AIDS, however, they often faced rejection and
isolation because of others' fears about the spread of HIV through
casual contact (e.g., Kinsella, 1989).
Symbolic AIDS stigma results from the
social meanings attached to AIDS. It represents the use of the disease
as a vehicle for expressing a variety of attitudes, especially attitudes
toward the groups perceived to be at risk for AIDS and the behaviors
that transmit HIV. Historically, symbolic AIDS stigma in the United
States has focused principally on male homosexuality, and much of the
American public continues to equate AIDS with homosexuality to a
significant extent (Herek, 1999; Herek & Capitanio, 1999). At the same
time, some segments of society have had different experiences with the
epidemic and, consequently, have different symbolic associations for
AIDS. In the African American community, for example, AIDS has affected
not only gay and bisexual men but also a substantial number of injecting
drug users, with the consequence that symbolic AIDS stigma is closely
related to attitudes toward the latter as well as the former (Capitanio
& Herek, 1999; Fullilove & Fullilove, 1999 [this issue]).
THE PERSONAL IMPACT OF AIDS STIGMA
In the 1997 national survey mentioned
above, more than three fourths of respondents expressed the belief that
people with AIDS are unfairly persecuted in our society (Herek &
Capitanio, 1998). The widespread expectation of stigma, combined with
actual experiences with prejudice and discrimination, exerts a
considerable impact on PWHIVs, their loved ones, and caregivers. It
affects many of the choices that PWHIVs make about being tested and
seeking assistance for their physical, psychological, and social needs
(Alonzo & Reynolds, 1995; Chesney & Smith, 1999 [this issue]; Hays et
al., 1993; Klitzman, 1997; Lester, Partridge, Chesney, & Cooke, 1995;
Lyter, Valdiserri, Kingsley, Amoroso, & Rinaldo, 1987; Siegel & Krauss,
1991). For example, fear of AIDS stigma and its attendant discrimination
may deter people at risk for HIV from being tested and seeking
information and assistance for risk reduction (Chesney & Smith, 1999).
In addition to the negative effects of
experiencing outright rejection and persecution, AIDS stigma has
considerable impact on PWHIVs' decisions about disclosing their health
status to others. Fearing rejection and mistreatment, many PWHIVs keep
their seropositive status a secret (Gielen, O'Campo, Faden, & Eke, 1997;
Hays et al., 1993; Klitzman, 1997). Whereas a desire to set boundaries
and control others' access to information about one's personal
life--including one's health status--is an important consideration
(Greene & Serovich, 1996), hiding one's HIV-positive status can lead to
isolation at a time when social support is badly needed (Crandall &
Coleman, 1992; Johnston, Stall, & Smith, 1995). Nondisclosure may also
reflect an internalizing of societal stigma by PWHIVs, which can lead to
self-loathing, self-blame, and self-destructive behaviors (Herek, 1990;
Klitzman, 1997). Nondisclosure to a sexual partner, especially when the
PWHIV fails to ensure that safer sex guidelines are strictly followed,
raises multiple ethical questions (Bayer, 1996).
The loved ones of PWAs also are at risk
for AIDS stigma and its negative effects. They, too, often face
ostracism and discrimination because of their association with a PWHIV.
This courtesy stigma (Goffman, 1963) can leave them without adequate
social support (Folkman, Chesney, & Christopher-Richards, 1994; Folkman,
Chesney, Cooke, Boccellari, & Collette, 1994; Jankowski, Videka-Sherman,
& Laquidara-Dickinson, 1996; Paul, Hays, & Coates, 1995; Poindexter &
Linsk, 1999). Caregivers and advocates for PWAs, whether professionals
or volunteers, also risk courtesy stigma, which may deter them from
working with PWHIVs entirely or make their work more difficult (Snyder,
Omoto, & Crain, 1999 [this issue]).
AIDS STIGMA AND PUBLIC POLICY
The politics of AIDS stigma have
repeatedly hindered society's response to the epidemic (Panem, 1988;
Shilts, 1987). Mass media were initially slow to report on AIDS,
probably because of its prevalence among already stigmatized groups
(Albert, 1986; Baker, 1986; Kinsella, 1989). Extensive resources that
might otherwise have gone to prevention instead were needed to respond
to coercive AIDS legislation whose purpose was primarily to stigmatize
and punish PWAs (Bayer, 1989; Epstein, 1996; Herek & Glunt, 1993).
Despite empirical data showing that needle exchange programs can play a
valuable role in helping to reduce HIV transmission among IDUs without
fostering increased drug use (Cross, Saunders, & Bartelli, 1998; Normand,
Vlahov, & Moses, 1995; Watters, Estilo, Clark, & Lorvick, 1994), AIDS
stigma and the stigma attached to injecting drug use have prevented the
large-scale implementation of such programs (Bayer, 1989; Capitanio &
Herek, 1999; Stolberg, 1998). Federal law and policy have consistently
prevented AIDS educators from providing clear and explicit risk
reduction information to individuals at risk (Bailey, 1995; Bayer, 1989;
Epstein, 1996; Shilts, 1987), which probably have reduced the
effectiveness of HIV prevention efforts. Indeed, some commentators have
argued that stigma is the root cause of the HIV epidemic in the United
States (Novick, 1997).
Recognition of the negative
consequences of AIDS stigma for individuals and for public health led to
the enactment of statutory protections for PWHIVs (Burris, 1999). In
addition to barring most discrimination based on HIV status, HIV was
exempted from traditional public health practices such as partner
notification and contact tracing, a pattern labeled AIDS exceptionalism
by some (Bayer, 1991, 1994). Moreover, whereas AIDS is a reportable
disease nationwide, requirements for reporting HIV infections vary
across states.
With the development of more effective
treatments for HIV disease and a widespread perception that AIDS stigma
has substantially declined, support for AIDS exceptionalism has
diminished. National reporting of the names of HIV-infected persons is
now strongly advocated by many leaders in public health (Gostin, Ward, &
Baker, 1997). The assumption that stigma no longer represents a serious
challenge in HIV policy may be premature, however. Given the widespread
perception that people with AIDS are unfairly persecuted (Herek &
Capitanio, 1998) coupled with distrust of government authorities in
minority communities (Herek & Capitanio, 1994), it is possible that many
people at risk for HIV infection could be deterred or delayed from being
tested if they believe that their names will be reported to a government
agency. Thus, a rush to institute the reporting of PWHIVs by name may
have deleterious consequences for increasing HIV testing among the
individuals at greatest risk for infection.
CONCLUSION
The association of stigma with disease
is not a new phenomenon. Throughout history, the stigma attached to
epidemic illnesses and social groups associated with them have often
hampered treatment and prevention, and have inflicted additional
suffering on sick individuals and their loved ones (e.g., McNeill, 1976;
Rosenberg, 1987). In this sense, the AIDS epidemic has many parallels to
older epidemics of cholera and plague (Herek, 1990). What differentiates
AIDS from earlier epidemics is that today we have the collective insight
to recognize stigma's impact on individual lives and public health, as
well as the technology to scientifically study stigma and seek to reduce
it (Devine, Plant, & Harrison, 1999 [this issue]). One of the great
challenges of the epidemic in the new millennium will be to apply our
insight and technology to the problem of eradicating AIDS stigma.
Author's Note: Preparation of this
article was supported by an Independent Scientist Award from the
National Institute of Mental Health (K02 MH01455).
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