Concealment tactics among HIV-positive nurses in Uganda
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| Publication date | 2012 |
| Journal | Culture, Health & Sexuality |
| Volume | Issue number | 14 | S1 |
| Pages (from-to) | S123-S133 |
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| Abstract |
This paper is based on two-and-a-half years of ethnographic fieldwork in two rural Ugandan health centres during a period of ART scale-up. Around one-third of the nurses in these two sites were themselves HIV-positive but most concealed their status. We describe how a group of HIV-positive nurses set up a secret circle to talk about their predicament as HIV-positive healthcare professionals and how they developed innovative care technologies to overcome the skin rashes caused by ART that threatened to give them away. Together with patients and a traditional healer, the nurses resisted hegemonic biomedical norms denouncing herbal medicines and then devised and advocated for a herbal skin cream treatment to be included in the ART programme.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1080/13691058.2012.716452 |
| Downloads |
Concealment_tactics_among_HIV-positive_nurses_in_Uganda.pdf
(Final published version)
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