精神信仰、艾滋病污名化和教育对南方腹地非洲裔美国农村教友艾滋病知识的影响:来自faith项目的额外发现。

Shameka L Cody, Raheem J Paxton, Hannah Woodard, Pamela Payne-Foster
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国,艾滋病毒的发病率已经发生了种族和地理上的变化,现在居住在南部农村的非洲裔美国人的比例更高。艾滋病毒知识水平较低可能是南部农村地区艾滋病毒感染率上升的罪魁祸首。本研究的目的是调查农村非洲裔美国人样本中艾滋病毒知识的个体和联合相关性。基于信仰的反污名干预(faith项目,N= 210)的基线数据被用来评估社会人口学特征、灵性、污名和HIV知识得分之间的关联。用递归分区检查关联。经双侧检验,P< 0.05为有统计学意义。递归分区根据数据显示了五个不同的组。艾滋病知识得分最高的是那些上过大学的参与者(P < 0.001),他们的个人耻辱感水平较低(P < 0.001)。受教育程度较低、社区污名水平较低的个体艾滋病毒知识得分最低(P < 0.001) (P = 0.002)。未来旨在改善农村非洲裔美国人艾滋病毒知识的干预措施应该考虑为那些在艾滋病毒知识方面存在最大缺陷的人量身定制内容,这可能是基于感知到的社区耻辱和教育水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Influence of Spirituality, HIV Stigma and Education on HIV Knowledge in Rural African American Congregants in the Deep South: Additional Findings from Project FAITHH.

HIV incidence has shifted racially and geographically in the United States and now represents higher proportions of African Americans living in the Rural South. Lower levels of HIV knowledge may be the culprit behind the increasing HIV rates observed in the Rural South. The purpose of this study was to investigate the individual and joint correlates of HIV knowledge in a sample of rural African Americans. Baseline data from a faith-based anti-stigma intervention (Project FAITHH, N= 210) was used to assess associations between sociodemographic characteristics, spirituality, stigma, and HIV knowledge scores. Associations were examined with recursive partitioning. Statistical significance was determined at P< 0.05 with a two-sided test. Recursive partitioning revealed five distinct groups based on the data. HIV knowledge scores were highest among participants who attended some college (P < 0.001) with lower levels of individual stigma (P < 0.001). HIV knowledge scores were lowest among less educated individuals (P < 0.001) who had lower levels of perceived community stigma (P = 0.002). Future interventions designed to improve HIV knowledge in rural African Americans should consider tailoring content to those who have the greatest deficits in HIV knowledge, which may be based on perceived community stigma and education levels.

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