Stigmatization and discrimination of female tuberculosis patients in Kyrgyzstan - a phenomenological study.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Rhea Brüggemann, Fabian Schlumberger, Firuza Chinshailo, Matthew Willis, Abdullaat Kadyrov, Gulmira Kalmambetova, Mo Chen, Sophie Cw Unterkircher, Nestan Moidunova, Altynai Sydykova, Anil Fastenau
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: The Republic of Kyrgyzstan is among the 30 countries with the highest burden of multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis worldwide. One of the reasons is widespread stigmatization and discrimination. As previous research has shown, particularly women experience stigma while its impact on their life and (mental) health is even greater than for men. This is the first phenomenological study to explore women's lived experiences of TB-related stigmatization in Kyrgyzstan. This study aims to raise awareness about the gender-specific impact of stigmatization and discrimination.

Methodology: Descriptive phenomenology was used. 15 semi-structured in-depth interviews with female TB-patients were conducted between 28th May and 14th June 2024. Themes were stigma experiences, their consequences and coping strategies. Participants were recruited from two TB Hospitals and two Family Medical Centers (primary health care units) in Bishkek through purposive sampling. The data analysis followed a thematic approach based on a combination of deductive and inductive coding.

Results: 14 of 15 participants experienced stigmatization and discrimination in one way or another. Anticipated stigma was very prominent, manifesting in non-disclosure of the diagnosis apart from close family. Enacted stigma mostly occurred within society or non-TB-specialized healthcare facilities. Self-stigmatization often followed anticipated and enacted stigma. Stigma experiences impacted daily and social life, marital prospects and access to educational and work opportunities but mainly led to mental health issues, which 12 of 15 participants reported.

Discussion: and Conclusion. In contrast to previous research, this study did not find diagnostic delay nor non-adherence to treatment because of stigmatization and discrimination. However, experiences within the healthcare facilities impacted the perceived quality of care. Stigmatization within the family, mostly by in-laws, was anchored in the patriarchal and conservative attitudes of Kyrgyz society. Overall, key findings of this study were widespread lack of knowledge about the disease and its transmission as a reason for and mental health issues because of stigmatization and discrimination. The findings imply the need for intervention strategies and policies focusing on education about TB, integration of psychosocial support into treatment and improvements in quality of care. Altogether, this could contribute to the reduction of TB-related stigmatization and discrimination which would reduce the individual burden of TB.

Abstract Image

吉尔吉斯斯坦女性结核病患者的污名化和歧视——现象学研究。
吉尔吉斯斯坦共和国是全世界耐多药结核病负担最重的30个国家之一。原因之一是普遍存在的污名化和歧视。正如先前的研究所表明的那样,尤其是妇女遭受耻辱,而这对她们的生活和(精神)健康的影响甚至比男性更大。这是探索吉尔吉斯斯坦妇女与结核病相关的污名化生活经历的第一项现象学研究。这项研究旨在提高人们对污名化和歧视对性别的影响的认识。方法:采用描述现象学。在2024年5月28日至6月14日期间对女性结核病患者进行了15次半结构化深度访谈。主题是耻辱经历,其后果和应对策略。参与者通过有目的抽样从比什凯克的两家结核病医院和两家家庭医疗中心(初级卫生保健单位)招募。数据分析遵循基于演绎和归纳编码相结合的主题方法。结果:15名参与者中有14人经历过这样或那样的耻辱和歧视。预期的耻辱感非常突出,表现在除了亲密的家庭外不透露诊断。制定的污名主要发生在社会或非结核病专业医疗机构。自我污名化通常伴随着预期的和制定的污名化。耻辱经历影响日常和社会生活、婚姻前景以及获得教育和工作机会,但主要导致心理健康问题,15名参与者中有12人报告了这一点。讨论:和结论。与之前的研究相比,本研究没有发现因污名化和歧视而导致诊断延迟或不坚持治疗。然而,在医疗机构内的经历影响了对护理质量的感知。家庭内部的歧视,主要是由姻亲造成的,根植于吉尔吉斯社会的父权和保守态度。总的来说,这项研究的主要发现是普遍缺乏对这种疾病及其传播的了解,这是由于污名化和歧视而导致精神健康问题的原因。研究结果表明,需要制定干预战略和政策,重点关注结核病教育,将社会心理支持纳入治疗,并提高护理质量。总之,这可能有助于减少与结核病有关的污名化和歧视,从而减轻结核病的个人负担。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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