Linda S Sprague Martinez, Judith C Scott, Melanie Rocco, Masill Miranda, Cynthia Tucker, Angela Wangari Walter
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In 2020, the Health Resources and Services Administration launched the first initiative focused on Black women in nearly 40 years of the HIV epidemic: the Black Women First initiative. A critical step toward advancing racial equity, the initiative addressed the health and social needs of diverse Black women in HIV care and treatment. In this essay, we posit that the disproportionate burden of HIV/AIDS experienced by Black women is rooted in racism, not race. Using critical reflexivity and the Public Health Critical Race praxis, we critically discuss the Black Women First initiative's framing and components, the factors contributing to successes and challenges, opportunities to deepen efforts, and recommendations to focus on dismantling racism in future efforts addressing care and treatment for Black women with HIV. We reflect on how racism was challenged through the involvement of Black women with lived experiences and racial justice organizations, although racism was not a focus of the initiative. Advancing the health of Black women with HIV needs a comprehensive and critical approach that addresses racism by changing intervention funding, service delivery, and the measurement of success. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print July 3, 2025:e1-e8. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2025.308138).
2020年,美国卫生资源和服务管理局(Health Resources and Services Administration)发起了艾滋病流行近40年来首个以黑人女性为重点的倡议:黑人女性优先倡议。该倡议解决了各种黑人妇女在艾滋病毒护理和治疗方面的健康和社会需要,是促进种族平等的关键一步。在这篇文章中,我们假设黑人妇女所经历的不成比例的艾滋病毒/艾滋病负担根源于种族主义,而不是种族。利用批判性反思和公共卫生关键种族实践,我们批判性地讨论了黑人妇女优先倡议的框架和组成部分,促成成功和挑战的因素,深化努力的机会,以及在未来解决黑人妇女感染艾滋病毒的护理和治疗工作中重点消除种族主义的建议。我们通过亲身经历的黑人妇女和种族正义组织的参与来反思种族主义是如何受到挑战的,尽管种族主义不是该倡议的重点。促进感染艾滋病毒的黑人妇女的健康需要一种全面和关键的方法,通过改变干预资金、服务提供和成功的衡量标准来解决种族主义问题。公共卫生。2025年7月3日在线出版:e1-e8。https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2025.308138)。
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) is dedicated to publishing original work in research, research methods, and program evaluation within the field of public health. The journal's mission is to advance public health research, policy, practice, and education.