Beyond the shadow of stigma Internal stigma is out of the shadows at AIDS 2024
Deirdre Ni Cheallaigh - CNS
"Stigma can be so insidious. It cuts deep and affects all of us," said Shaun Mellors, Director, Community Stakeholder Engage- ment, ViiV Healthcare who was speaking on Zero HIV Stigma Day during the opening plenary of LIVING2024. “Every day should be Zero HIV Stigma day,” rightly said Shaun. Shaun celebrated the inspiring legacy of Prudence Nobantu Mabele who was a force for change for a socially just world, and a noted South African activist. Shaun said that lessons from Prudence’s legacy are to “speak your truth”, “be brave”, “sing, even if you are a terrible singer, sing”, and "laugh and make others laugh.”
All forms of HIV-related stigma and discrimination must end so that all people can access full spectrum of health and social services in a rights-based, people-centred and gender transformative manner. People living with HIV who anticipate stigma are 2.4 times more likely to delay care until very ill.
Stigma – from the inside out?
“It is important to tackle stigma and discrimination at all levels of the socio-ecological level-individual, family and peers, community and structural level, to affect sustainable and transformative change. We need evidence-based multi-level interventions (to tackle all forms of stigma and discrimination–including inter- nal stigma) for lasting change,” said Nadine Ferris France, CEO of Beyond Stigma and Certified Facilitator of Inquiry-based Stress Reduction (IBSR). Internal stigma is a mindset of negative beliefs, thoughts, and behaviours about HIV, which manifests as shame, guilt, feelings of contamination, reduced self- efficacy, self-loathing, low self-esteem and self-rejection.
“Internal stigma happens when we internalise external stigma and judgements and believe that they are true. Internal stigma also happens in the absence of external stigma and discrimination”, explained Nadine.
“84.5% of people living with HIV report internalised stigma or internal stigma or shame, according to the People Living with HIV (Stigma Index (December 2023)”, she added. The PLHIV Stigma Index is supported by the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria and US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Partnership to Eliminate all Forms of HIV-Stigma and Discrimination. The PLHIV Stigma Index indicates that addressing internalised stigma is crucial for implementing community-led initiatives, improving treatment adherence, and accessing prevention services in focus countries.
Internal stigma results in a host of negative impacts on HIV programme outcomes, shares Nadine. For example, people tend not to seek care, treatment adherence goes down, depression increases, fears of disclosure increases, quality of life and self-esteem dips, self-efficacy is reduced, and people likely to feel more isolation, anger or resentment.
Through evidence-based interventions such as as the Wakakosha: I am Worth It peer-led intervention to support young people living with HIV improve wellbeing and improve self-worth, Wakakosha is layered within the existing Zvandiri CATS model and uses a cognitive-awareness approach called Inquiry-based stress reduction together with creativity such as music, poetry, writing and drawing. Currently being implemented in Zimbabwe and starting now in Rwanda, Ghana and elsewhere, results are promising.
“Addressing internal stigma helps improve treatment adherence; boosts self-confidence, self-agency, and sense of purpose/ meaning; reduces fears around disclosure, and body positivity; in-creases communication and personal/family relationships and forgiveness,” said Nicola Willis, Executive Director of Zvandiri. (To be contd)