Author: Ho, Lai Peng; Goh, Esther C. L.
Title: How HIV patients construct liveable identities in a shame based culture: the case of Singapore Document date: 2017_6_22
ID: rws2twyo_1
Snippet: It has been more than 30 years since the first incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was discovered in the USA in 1981. At that time, little was known about the disease. There was much stigmatization and discrimination as it was a fatal, infectious disease with a rapidly declining illness trajectory and no known cure. Moreover, HIV mainly affected stigmatized groups such as gay men and intravenous drug users. During the 1990s, significa.....
Document: It has been more than 30 years since the first incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was discovered in the USA in 1981. At that time, little was known about the disease. There was much stigmatization and discrimination as it was a fatal, infectious disease with a rapidly declining illness trajectory and no known cure. Moreover, HIV mainly affected stigmatized groups such as gay men and intravenous drug users. During the 1990s, significant medical advances ushered in a new era and transformed HIV from a fatal to a manageable chronic disease (Mocroft et al., 1998) . Not only have medical advances enabled people with HIV to have an increased life expectancy, but studies have shown that with the use of anti-retroviral therapy (ART), those with undetectable viral load pose a significantly lower risk of sexual transmission of HIV to others (Bavinton et al., 2014; Cohen et al., 2011) . With transmissibility significantly reduced, they can have sexual relationships, get married, and have HIV-negative children, which are possibilities they may not have had pre-ART (Seeley et al., 2009) . Thus, ART allows people with HIV to regain some semblance of normality with socially normative roles (Persson & Richards, 2008) . Sontag (1989) had earlier predicted that HIV would be treated as another chronic disease once it was better understood and when treatment became available. In the years following the advent of ART, there were attempts to reframe HIV from a health crisis requiring "exceptional" intervention strategies to a chronic disease which should be treated "like any other" (Moyer & Hardon, 2014) . However, owing to pervasive stigma and discrimination, there is literature which argues against the notion that HIV has been normalized as another disease (Moyer & Hardon, 2014; Persson, 2013) .
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