Barriers and pathways to testing among HIV-infected women Journal Article


Authors: Siegel, K.; Raveis, V. H.; Gorey, E.
Article Title: Barriers and pathways to testing among HIV-infected women
Abstract: Through in-depth interviews the testing experiences of HIV-infected women were examined. The barriers that impeded the women from recognizing their at-risk status and from seeking testing once their vulnerability was acknowledged are discussed. Also described are the pathways that led women into testing. The data reveal that lack of understanding about risk behaviors, ignorance of their partner's risk practices, lack of information about HIV-related symptoms, and perceived invulnerability to infection were the principal barriers to women recognizing their at-risk status. The women's accounts also indicate that psychological factors - fear and denial - are the principal barriers to seeking testing once one acknowledges vulnerability. Finally, the data show that few women made a thoughtful proactive decision to be tested but rather seemed to be led by circumstances to learn their status, sometimes unwittingly.
Keywords: adult; middle aged; united states; human immunodeficiency virus infection; health behavior; mass screening; risk assessment; psychological aspect; experience; patient compliance; new york city; interview; serodiagnosis; health knowledge, attitudes, practice; fear; socioeconomic factors; hiv infections; normal human; human experiment; confidentiality; interviews; aids serodiagnosis; risk-taking; humans; human; female; article; denial; contact tracing
Journal Title: AIDS Education and Prevention
Volume: 10
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0899-9546
Publisher: Guilford Press  
Date Published: 1998-01-01
Start Page: 114
End Page: 127
Language: English
PUBMED: 9573434
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 12 December 2016 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Eileen   Gorey
    9 Gorey