2016
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-33251-2_4
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Thinking About Street Children and Orphans in Africa: Beyond Survival

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“…Similarly, the stigma of HIV is still strong in many parts of the world. Not only the persons living with HIV but also the surviving children of HIV/AIDS-affected parents may be treated with hostility, with the latter being left without adequate adult support (Bourdillon 2017). Figure 3.3 shows the differences across three countries in reports by gay men and female sex workers (two groups associated with higher susceptibility to HIV/AIDS) of avoiding health care in the past 12 (Nöstlinger and others 2014) found that 32 percent of respondents had experienced HIV-related discrimination in the three prior years, and almost half of them felt that they had been discriminated against by health care providers.…”
Section: Processes Of Exclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the stigma of HIV is still strong in many parts of the world. Not only the persons living with HIV but also the surviving children of HIV/AIDS-affected parents may be treated with hostility, with the latter being left without adequate adult support (Bourdillon 2017). Figure 3.3 shows the differences across three countries in reports by gay men and female sex workers (two groups associated with higher susceptibility to HIV/AIDS) of avoiding health care in the past 12 (Nöstlinger and others 2014) found that 32 percent of respondents had experienced HIV-related discrimination in the three prior years, and almost half of them felt that they had been discriminated against by health care providers.…”
Section: Processes Of Exclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%