11 research outputs found

    Social capital and HIV-serodiscordance: Disparities in access to personal and professional resources for HIV-positive and HIV-negative partners.

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    As people living with HIV are living longer lives, they have a correspondingly greater opportunity to enjoy long-term romantic and sexual partnerships, including with persons who do not live with HIV ("serodiscordant" relationships). In these dyads, asymmetries may emerge in access to social resources between partners. In this paper we examined how serodiscordant couples access informal (interpersonal, such as family and friends) and formal (practitioner, such as doctor or social worker) social resources for health. We recruited 540 participants in current serodiscordant relationships, working with 150 AIDS service organizations and HIV clinics across Canada from 2016 to 2018. Our findings demonstrate that partners with HIV have greater access to formal resources than their partners (through health care professionals, therapists/counselors/support workers), while both persons have similar access to resources through informal social relationships (family and friends). Furthermore, the findings indicated that HIV positive partners accessed more varied forms of support through formal ties, compared to HIV negative persons. We offer recommendations for changes to how HIV-negative partners in a serodiscordant relationship are served and cared for, and particularly, the importance of moving toward dyad-focused policies and practices

    Disclosure of HIV-serodiscordant relationships and association with viral suppression: results from the Positive Plus One study.

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    BACKGROUND: Little is known about the effects of disclosure of HIV-serodiscordant relationships on clinical outcomes. We aimed to evaluate the effect of relationship disclosure on HIV viral suppression, and hypothesized that disclosure by HIV-positive and HIV-negative partners would be associated with viral suppression in the HIV-positive partner. METHODS: We conducted a Canadian national online and telephone-administered survey of HIV-positive and HIV-negative partners in serodiscordant relationships. The primary outcome was self-reported viral suppression. Multivariable analyses were undertaken using Firth logistic regression. RESULTS: We recruited 540 participants in current serodiscordant relationships (n = 228 HIV-negative; n = 312 HIV-positive). Similar proportions of HIV-positive and HIV-negative partners disclosed their relationship to healthcare professionals (82% v. 76%, p = 0.13). Among HIV-positive partners, disclosure of the relationship to healthcare professionals increased the odds of viral suppression (aOR = 4.7; CI: 2.13, 10.51) after adjusting for age, education, and relationship turmoil due to HIV. Increasing age (aOR = 1.28; 95% CI = 1.07, 1.55) and education (aOR = 2.43; 95% CI = 1.15, 5.26) were also associated with viral suppression. Among HIV-negative partners, relationship disclosure was not associated with viral suppression and HIV-negative heterosexual men were less likely to report that their HIV-positive partners were virally suppressed (aOR = 0.24; CI: 0.09, 0.61). CONCLUSIONS: Disclosure of HIV-serodiscordant status by HIV-positive participants to healthcare professionals was associated with increased odds of viral suppression. Similar effects were not evident among HIV-negative participants. Future work should explore factors that empower relationship disclosure and incorporate them into supportive services for HIV-serodiscordant relationships

    Marital breakdown and the health of the nation

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q92/10867(Marital) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Dual pharmaceutical citizenship: Exploring biomedicalization in the daily lives of mixed HIV-serostatus couples in Canada.

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    Positive Plus One is the first large-scale mixed methods study of mixed HIV serostatus couples in Canada. We aimed to understand how biomedicalization i.e., a social process of commodification and expansion of the jurisdiction of medicine over health, influenced the everyday relationships of these couples. We completed 51 semi-structured interviews among a purposive sample of HIV-positive (n = 27) and HIV-negative (n = 24) partners in current or past mixed-serostatus relationships. Participants were recruited after completing an online survey where they consented to be re-contacted for qualitative interviews. Participants represented a diversity of sexual orientations, gender identities, and other sociodemographic characteristics. Drawing on inductive thematic analysis to identify patterns within couples, across serostatus and sexual orientations, we argue that everyday lives of mixed-serostatus couples were shaped by biomedical knowledge and enacted through routine adherence to obtain and maintain viral load undetectability. Our findings illustrated the importance of learning biomedical knowledge for mixed-serostatus couples in this study, the empowering influence of undetectable = untransmittable (UU) discourse, and its role in rendering HIV mundane through routine ART adherence. We introduce the concept of 'dual pharmaceutical citizenship' to underscore a process by which particular biopolitical and biomedical expectations are fulfilled in mixed-serostatus relationships. These findings have implications for people who do not readily accept or have access to biomedical knowledge, particularly when treatment-as-prevention frames a "right" and "wrong" approach to HIV management. Future studies should focus on couples where at least one partner does not readily accept or have access to biomedical knowledge

    UI Dark Patterns and Where to Find Them A Study on Mobile Applications and User Perception

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    A Dark Pattern (DP) is an interface maliciously crafted to deceive users into performing actions they did not mean to do. In this work, we analyze Dark Patterns in 240 popular mobile apps and conduct an online experiment with 589 users on how they perceive Dark Patterns in such apps. The results of the analysis show that 95% of the analyzed apps contain one or more forms of Dark Patterns and, on average, popular applications include at least seven different types of deceiving interfaces. The online experiment shows that most users do not recognize Dark Patterns, but can perform better in recognizing malicious designs if informed on the issue. We discuss the impact of our work and what measures could be applied to alleviate the issue

    Timing as a source of regulatory influence: a technical elite network analysis of global finance

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    Rules governing the international financial system are the subject of some of the most intense distributional battles waged in any area of global governance. Who wins and who loses such battles – and why? I develop a novel analytical framework – technical elite network (TEN) theory – which explains the widely varying levels of influence that stakeholders enjoy over global financial standards. TEN theory draws attention to how issue‐specific characteristics of international finance – in particular, its highly technical and complex nature – shape the distributional consequences of global regulatory processes. It posits that such characteristics influence distributional outcomes by (i) affecting who claims first‐mover position and, thus, sets the agenda in global financial rulemaking, and (ii) ensuring that proposals made by first movers are increasingly difficult to alter at later stages of rulemaking. I provide empirical evidence for the theory by examining two regulatory regimes that are central to the efficiency and stability of the global financial system: the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Accounting Standards Board
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