Correlates of HIV-Related Stigmas Among African American Church-Affiliated Populations in Kansas City

Author:

Derose Kathryn P.1,Berkley-Patton Jannette2,Hamilton-Burgess Chavon3,Thompson Carole Bowe2,Williams Eric D.4,Simon Stephen2,Allsworth Jenifer E.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Massachusetts Amherst, Department of Health Promotion and Policy and the RAND Corporation.

2. University of Missouri—Kansas City, School of Medicine.

3. University of Massachusetts Amherst, Department of Health Promotion and Policy.

4. Calvary Community Outreach Network, Kansas City, Missouri.

Abstract

HIV-related stigmas contribute to disparities, and contact with HIV-positive individuals has been suggested to reduce stigma. Faith-based organizations have been recognized as important to stigma reduction efforts among African American populations; however, relatively few church-based studies have measured HIV-related stigma. This study uses baseline data (N = 1,448) from a study with 14 African American churches in Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas, to examine correlates of HIV-related stigmas among church members and community members accessing church social services using two previously validated scales that measure discomfort interacting with individuals with HIV and anticipated stigma or rejection. Knowing someone with HIV was associated with lower discomfort, even after adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics and sexual risk, HIV knowledge, previous communication about HIV at church, and mean drug and homosexuality stigmas. Knowing someone with HIV was not associated with anticipated stigma or rejection after adjustment. Contact-based interventions hold promise for reducing discomfort around people with HIV among church-affiliated populations.

Publisher

Guilford Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science)

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