Anne Stangl

ICRW Releases Blueprint for Reducing HIV-related Stigma in India

Indian government officials and others gather to discuss strategy to address HIV-related stigma
Fri, 01/18/2013

ICRW helped develop a strategy for the Indian government to reduce HIV-related stigma and discrimination nationwide. On Jan. 18, researchers share their findings with government officials, UN organizations and others during an event in New Delhi. 

The International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) on Jan. 18 debuts a much-anticipated blueprint for how to effectively address HIV-related stigma and discrimination in numerous settings – from hospitals to college campuses – in India.

The country’s National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) tapped ICRW and other select organizations three years ago to devise a strategy for reducing HIV-related stigma and discrimination nationwide.

To that end, ICRW researchers used a global blueprint for reducing stigma that they had previously developed and adapted it to be culturally relevant for India. ICRW then tested the framework in five settings throughout India and assessed whether it would be feasible to integrate the framework into NACO’s – and other organizations’ – HIV programs.

India is the first country to pilot ICRW’s universal framework and evaluate whether it could appropriately guide national efforts to reduce stigma.

ICRW will host an event Jan. 18 in New Delhi to present the results of its study and discuss how the Indian government can move forward with the findings. Officials from NACO, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), World Health Organization (WHO), UNAIDS and other organizations will participate in the gathering. ICRW President Sarah Degnan Kambou and Ravi Verma, director of ICRW’s Asia Regional Office, as well as Madhumita Das, a senior technical specialist in that office and Anne Stangl, a senior behavioral scientist and HIV stigma expert in ICRW’s Washington office, will lead presentations.

“Our study, with evidence from multiple sectors, is timely and strategic,” Verma said. “With the right kind of advocacy and support from other international agencies like UNDP, UNAIDS and WHO, the framework we have developed can be at the forefront of the Indian government’s efforts to curb HIV.”

Despite a nearly 60 percent drop in HIV prevalence over the past decade, the epidemic persists among India’s most vulnerable populations, such as sex workers and intravenous drug users. ICRW experts say this suggests that more is needed to reduce barriers – like stigma and discrimination – that certain groups face in accessing HIV treatment, care and prevention.

Indeed, tackling stigma is a key component in NACO’s latest phase of programming in response to the epidemic.

For ICRW’s study, researchers worked in partnership with five organizations in three states to carry out a variety of activities aimed at decreasing stigma and discrimination. Specifically, the project took place among university faculty, female sex workers living with HIV, local government members, hospital workers and leadership teams in workplaces. 

ICRW ultimately determined that the global framework for reducing HIV-related stigma could indeed be adapted for India. ICRW found that to do so would require:

  • Addressing a fear of HIV infection and social judgment that is prevalent among many different populations
  • Working with several key groups in the same setting to influence the different factors that drive stigma, such a fear of infection through casual contact
  • Focusing on how HIV-related stigma may also intersect with other types of stigma and discrimination – such as that related to one’s caste or occupation
  • Working with family and peers of populations affected by HIV
  • Using a range of activities to engage a variety of groups – from families to institutions – to help foster an environment that can support lasting change
  • Creating opportunities to meet members of groups who experience stigma – such as transgender people – to help break down discriminatory attitudes

“Our findings will set the stage for a right move forward by the national government as it carries out efforts to address the HIV epidemic,” Verma said. “Our experience in India also demonstrates that the global framework ICRW designed can be adapted by other countries eager to address the underlying factors, like stigma and discrimination, that fuel HIV transmission and impede people’s access to services.”

Watch a video of participant attitudes toward HIV-related stigma here

Read the full summary report, “A Global HIV Stigma Reduction Framework Adapted and Implemented in Five Settings in India."

ICRW’s Anne Stangl to Discuss HIV-related Stigma at AIDS Conference

Mon, 07/23/2012

ICRW’s Anne Stangl will speak on the challenges posed by HIV-related stigma and efforts underway globally to address the issue during the International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C.  

ICRW Senior Behavioral Scientist Anne Stangl on July 24 will be a panelist for a discussion on the challenges posed by HIV-related stigma and discrimination and the innovative solutions underway globally to address the issue. 

The event is being hosted by the Stigma Action Network and is part of the International AIDS Conference this week at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. The discussion will take place from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. in booth 810 at the Positive Action Networking Zone in the conference’s Global Village

Stangl and panelists will provide attendees with an understanding of the varied forms of HIV-related stigma and discrimination, how they fuel the epidemic, the unique challenges faced by key populations, and what to do to reduce stigma. Panelists also will highlight proven approaches for incorporating stigma reduction efforts into HIV programs, new evidence about stigma and how the Stigma Action Network is working to reduce HIV-related stigma. 

Learn how you can partner with ICRW.

STRIVE: Addressing the Structural Drivers of HIV

STRIVE is a research consortium investigating the social norms and inequalities that drive HIV. Despite substantial progress in addressing AIDS, the number of people newly HIV-infected continues to outstrip the number entering treatment. Although the importance of addressing the structural drivers of HIV is increasingly recognised, there is limited evidence on how best to intervene.

A six-year international research consortium, STRIVE research focuses on gender inequality and violence, poor livelihood options, alcohol availability and drinking norms, and stigma and criminalization. The consortium seeks to understand how these forces drive the epidemic; what programmes are effective in tackling them; how such interventions can, affordably, be taken to scale; and how best to translate this research into policy and practice.

Duration: 
2011-2017
Location(s): 
India
Location(s): 
South Africa
Location(s): 
Tanzania

Standing Against Stigma

Fri, 01/07/2011
POZ

POZ features the Stigma Action Network, which seeks best practices for reducing HIV-related stigma, and quotes ICRW’s Anne Stangl, behavioral scientist and stigma specialist.

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