Endangered Self

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A01=Elisa Sobo
A01=Gill Green
AIDS
AIDS Stigma
Author_Elisa Sobo
Author_Gill Green
Category=JBFN
chronic illness adaptation
Collect Gender Data
Current IDUs
Current Injecting Drug Users
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
General Healthcare Settings
Green 1995a
healthcare discrimination
High School Drop Outs
HIV Diagnosis
HIV Positive Citizen
HIV Positive Diagnosis
HIV Positive People
HIV Positive Sample
HIV Serostatus
medical sociology
Participant's HIV Status
Positive HIV Serostatus
Potential Disclosee
qualitative case studies
Receive HIV Treatment
risk perception
Seropositive Participants
Seropositive People
Serostatus Disclosure
social risk and HIV identity change
stigma management
Supportive Social Circles
Total Social Support Score
Total Support Score
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781857289107
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Mar 2000
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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To date, the majority of HIV/AIDS research has concentrated on education and prevention for those with a seronegative status, while studies of HIV positive individuals have been concerned with their potential to infect others. The Endangered Self however, focuses on how the discovery of an HIV positive status affects the individual's sense of identity, on the experience of living with HIV and its effects on the individual's social relationships. In this comparative study of the UK and US, Green and Sobo explore identity change and the stigma attached to an HIV positive status within the context of the sociology of risk. Chapters discuss issues such as:
*identity, social risk and AIDS
*stigma
*living and coping with HIV
*the danger of disclosure
*reported reactions in health care settings and sexual settings
*risk and reality
*seropositivity.
The Endangered Self will be of interest to all those infected with HIV and to their families, partners, friends and caregivers who are affected by it. It will be essential reading for health-care professionals and those studying medical anthropology, sociology and health and risk studies.

Gill Green is a Senior Lecturer at the Health and Social Services Institute, University of Essex. Elisa J. Sobo is Clinic Director and Associate Investigator, National Study of Nutrition an d Health, University of California, San Diego.

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