Guilford Publications Inc.
View my basket
Atypon Link logo

You have no access to this article

Injection Drug Users' Strategies to Manage Perceptions of Personal Risk: How Do IDUs See HIV as Having Affected Them?


Author(s): Katherine Clegg Smith | Tiffany Lefevre Lillie | Carl Latkin
doi: 10.1521/aeap.2007.19.3.245
Prev | Table of contents | Next
 
View PDF article (168 K) View PDF with links (176 K)
Email this link
 What is RSS?
Trouble viewing articles as PDF?
 
  AIDS Education and Prevention
 
Print ISSN: 0899-9546
Volume: 19 | Issue: 3
Cover date: June 2007
Page(s): 245-257
 
 
  Abstract

The U.S. public health community is in its 3rd decade of seeking to prevent and treat HIV/AIDS. Injection drug users (IDUs) are central to targeted HIV prevention interventions as approximately one third of new U.S. infections are attributable to injection drug use (Santibanez et al.,Journal of Urban Health, 83[1], 86-100, 2006). Targeted behavior change efforts are often explicitly built upon the risk perception of targeted individuals. In this article, we consider the efficacy of behavior change based on IDUs' perceptions of elevated risk. Our qualitative analysis of 28 interviews with HIV negative IDUs in inner city Baltimore suggests that participants did not see themselves as personally affected by HIV. Rather, respondents constructed accounts in which they differentiated themselves from the type of people who are so affected, thereby creating a less stigmatizing identity. We argue that effective HIV prevention should explicitly acknowledge and address the stigmatized IDU identity, rather than assuming readiness for behavior change.

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Address correspondence to Dr. K. Smith, Rm. 726 Hampton House, 624 . Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205; E-mail : kasmith@jhsph.edu.
 
  This article has been cited by:
1.
 
Longitudinal Determinants of Consistent Condom Use by Partner Type Among Young Injection Drug Users: The Role of Personal and Partner Characteristics.
F. Kapadia, M. H. Latka, Y. Wu, S. A. Strathdee, M. E. Mackesy-Amiti, S. M. Hudson, H. Thiede, R. S. Garfein.
AIDS and Behavior
CrossRef