Jason M Lo Hog Tian, Abbey McFarland, Lucas Penny, Teresa Bennett, Kaminda Musumbulwa, James R Watson, J Odhiambo Apondi, Stefan Baral, Catherine Worthington, Ken Monteith, Brent Oliver, Michael Payne, Sean B Rourke
{"title":"性别、种族和性取向的交叉认同与艾滋病污名化:来自加拿大三个省艾滋病毒感染者污名化指数研究的结果","authors":"Jason M Lo Hog Tian, Abbey McFarland, Lucas Penny, Teresa Bennett, Kaminda Musumbulwa, James R Watson, J Odhiambo Apondi, Stefan Baral, Catherine Worthington, Ken Monteith, Brent Oliver, Michael Payne, Sean B Rourke","doi":"10.1080/13691058.2025.2499638","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Stigma remains a significant burden for people living with HIV and while studies have examined the impacts of gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation on stigma separately, little is known about how these factors may intersect and potentially exacerbate levels of stigma. This study examines how these intersecting social positions may relate to levels of internalised, enacted and anticipated HIV stigma. Participants were recruited in Ontario, Alberta, and Québec (<i>n</i> = 1040) as part of the People Living with HIV Stigma Index study in Canada. Three-way interaction models were constructed by creating interaction terms from the product of gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation variables that predicted each type of stigma. Levels of internalised, enacted and anticipated stigma were consistent across most intersecting groups; however, people occupying certain intersections experienced significantly higher levels of stigma. Three-way interaction analyses showed that for internalised stigma, people at the intersection of African/Caribbean/Black, lesbian, cis-women identities had significantly higher scores (<i>b</i> = 0.90, <i>p</i> = 0.06), while people at the intersection of Indigenous, lesbian, and cis-women identities had higher scores for enacted stigma (<i>b</i> = 1.21, <i>p</i> = 0.01) compared to the White, heterosexual, cis-men reference group. Interventions designed for populations that take intersectionality into account may be effective in reducing HIV stigma, although more quantitative intersectionality work must be done to understand these implications fully.</p>","PeriodicalId":10799,"journal":{"name":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","volume":" ","pages":"1-18"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Intersecting gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation identities and HIV stigma: results from the People Living with HIV Stigma Index study in three provinces in Canada.\",\"authors\":\"Jason M Lo Hog Tian, Abbey McFarland, Lucas Penny, Teresa Bennett, Kaminda Musumbulwa, James R Watson, J Odhiambo Apondi, Stefan Baral, Catherine Worthington, Ken Monteith, Brent Oliver, Michael Payne, Sean B Rourke\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/13691058.2025.2499638\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Stigma remains a significant burden for people living with HIV and while studies have examined the impacts of gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation on stigma separately, little is known about how these factors may intersect and potentially exacerbate levels of stigma. 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Three-way interaction analyses showed that for internalised stigma, people at the intersection of African/Caribbean/Black, lesbian, cis-women identities had significantly higher scores (<i>b</i> = 0.90, <i>p</i> = 0.06), while people at the intersection of Indigenous, lesbian, and cis-women identities had higher scores for enacted stigma (<i>b</i> = 1.21, <i>p</i> = 0.01) compared to the White, heterosexual, cis-men reference group. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
耻辱感仍然是艾滋病毒感染者的一个重大负担,尽管有研究分别考察了性别、种族和性取向对耻辱感的影响,但对这些因素如何交叉并可能加剧耻辱感的程度知之甚少。本研究探讨了这些交叉的社会地位如何与内化、制定和预期的艾滋病毒耻辱水平相关。参与者在安大略省、阿尔伯塔省和魁姆塞克省招募(n = 1040),作为加拿大艾滋病毒感染者污名指数研究的一部分。通过从预测每种病耻感的性别、种族和性取向变量的乘积中创建交互项,构建了三向交互模型。在大多数交叉群体中,内化、制定和预期的耻辱程度是一致的;然而,占据某些十字路口的人经历了明显更高程度的耻辱。三向互动分析显示,与白人、异性恋、顺式男性参照组相比,非洲/加勒比/黑人、女同性恋、顺式女性身份交叉点的内化污名得分显著较高(b = 0.90, p = 0.06),而土著、女同性恋、顺式女性身份交叉点的制定污名得分显著较高(b = 1.21, p = 0.01)。为考虑到交叉性的人群设计的干预措施可能有效地减少艾滋病毒的耻辱,尽管必须做更多的定量交叉性工作来充分理解这些影响。
Intersecting gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation identities and HIV stigma: results from the People Living with HIV Stigma Index study in three provinces in Canada.
Stigma remains a significant burden for people living with HIV and while studies have examined the impacts of gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation on stigma separately, little is known about how these factors may intersect and potentially exacerbate levels of stigma. This study examines how these intersecting social positions may relate to levels of internalised, enacted and anticipated HIV stigma. Participants were recruited in Ontario, Alberta, and Québec (n = 1040) as part of the People Living with HIV Stigma Index study in Canada. Three-way interaction models were constructed by creating interaction terms from the product of gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation variables that predicted each type of stigma. Levels of internalised, enacted and anticipated stigma were consistent across most intersecting groups; however, people occupying certain intersections experienced significantly higher levels of stigma. Three-way interaction analyses showed that for internalised stigma, people at the intersection of African/Caribbean/Black, lesbian, cis-women identities had significantly higher scores (b = 0.90, p = 0.06), while people at the intersection of Indigenous, lesbian, and cis-women identities had higher scores for enacted stigma (b = 1.21, p = 0.01) compared to the White, heterosexual, cis-men reference group. Interventions designed for populations that take intersectionality into account may be effective in reducing HIV stigma, although more quantitative intersectionality work must be done to understand these implications fully.