AIDS Control and the Workplace: The Role of Occupational Health Services in South Africa

Author:

London Leslie

Abstract

AIDS interventions typically fail to address the disjuncture between private behaviors and the social determinants of HIV infection. Data from a telephone survey of manufacturing companies and a postal survey of occupational health nurses in the Western Cape, South Africa, were used to explore the possible role of occupational health services in prevention and control of AIDS. The author found limited evidence of worker involvement in AIDS programs, particularly in companies with occupational health professionals. The management of sexually transmitted diseases was incomplete. Mandatory pre-employment testing of workers for HIV was not widespread. Respondents' opinions on priorities for AIDS prevention and control reflected a preoccupation with knowledge transfer. To ensure their effectiveness, workplace AIDS programs must improve worker participation and integrate AIDS prevention in general workplace health and safety programs. In addition, education programs must develop objectives within a critical theoretical understanding of the behavioral issues relevant to AIDS prevention, and must emphasize the empowerment of women in the workplace. In the context of the present restructuring of health services in South Africa, occupational health services, using the strategies outlined, can make a major contribution to national AIDS prevention and control.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

Reference60 articles.

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1. HIV and TB Workplace Program for Street Vendors: A Situational Analysis;NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy;2021-12-27

2. Assessing HIV Risk in Workplaces for Prioritizing HIV Preventive Interventions in Karnataka State, India;Sexually Transmitted Diseases;2009-09

3. Women's health, HIV/AIDS and the workplace in South Africa;African Journal of AIDS Research;2008-11

4. HIV/AIDS in South Africa: A select bibliography;Society in Transition;2002-09

5. Risk, sexuality and economy;The British Journal of Sociology;2002-03

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