1st Edition

Women and AIDS Negotiating Safer Practices, Care, and Representation

    For many women, the advice “Use a condom!” is not enough to help protect them from HIV infection. As Women and AIDS reveals, “negotiating” safer sex practices is a very complex issue for women who are involved in relationships where they do not enjoy physical, social, or economic equality. The book’s authors maintain that the key to curbing the spread of HIV and to caring for those already infected--is communication. Women and AIDS is the first volume to address HIV/AIDS and women from a communication perspective.

    This helpful guidebook addresses how women might achieve safer sexual and drug injection practices with partners, but it also explores women’s negotiation of the health care system as patients, medical research subjects, and caregivers. It challenges traditional assumptions about the relationship between care providers and patients and the meaning of patient compliance and raises important questions about gender, race, and class that are exacerbated by the epidemic. Designed to ground interventions in the realities of women’s lives, Women and AIDS discusses what women can do to get around communication and health care obstacles. To this end, you will learn about:

    • using the media for HIV-related social action and to promote women’s views of HIV and sexuality
    • prison health care for HIV-positive women
    • cultural constructions of sex and drug sharing in a variety of communities
    • long-term changes that will empower women
    • delivering an HIV-positive diagnosis to patients
    • gender roles and caregiving
    • the language we use to talk about “Third World” women and “Asian AIDS”
    • women AIDS filmmakers/videographers
    For the benefit of AIDS activists, health care providers, and counselors, Women and AIDS discusses women and their communication and awareness from virtually every angle. This book analyzes situations where communication breaks down--from the woman who can’t openly discuss safe sex with her partner, to the drunk college student who “hooks up,” to the doctor who gives an HIV-positive diagnosis without compassion--and offers communication solutions. This will help women avoid such risks, establish communication and safety in their lives, and construct meaningful roles in relationship to HIV/AIDS.

    Introduction; Part I Negotiating Safer Practices; Chapter 1 Reconsidering the HIV/AIDS Prevention Needs of Latino Women in the United States, Marcela Raffaelli, Mariana Suarez-Al-Adam; Chapter 2 Understanding Safer Sex Negotiation in a Group of Low-Income African-American Women, Gina Ann Margillo, T. Todd Imahori; Chapter 3 HIV-Related Communication and Power in Women Injecting Drug Users, Deborah L. Brimlow, Michael W. Ross; Chapter 4 Safer Sex Negotiation in Cross-Cultural Romantic Dyads: An Extension of Ting-Toomey’s Face Negotiation Theory, Gust A. Yep; Chapter 5 Navigating the Freedoms of College Life: Students Talk About Alcohol, Gender, and Sex, Deborah J. Cohen, Linda C. Lederman; Part II Negotiating Care; Chapter 6 Communicating an HIV-Positive Diagnosis, Lorraine D. Jackson, Michael J. Selby; Chapter 7 Affirming the Role of Women as Carers: The Social Construction of AIDS Through the Eyes of Mother, Friend, and Nurse, Diane M. Kimoto; Chapter 8 Enacting Care: Successful Recruitment, Retention, and Compliance of Women in HIV/AIDS Medical Research, Nancy L. Roth, Myra Shoub Nelson, Carol Collins, Pamela Emmons, Mary Alderson, Frank Hatcher, Barbara Nabrit-Stephens, Mary Ann South; Part III Negotiating Representation; Chapter 9 Women and the AIDS Memorial Quilt, David F. Shaw; Chapter 10 Redressing Sanuk: “Asian AIDS” and the Practices of Women’s Resistance, John Nguyet Erni; Chapter 11 To Desire to Direct Differently: Women Producer/Directors of AIDS Films, Linda K. Fuller; Chapter 12 Sentimentality, Race, and Boys on the Side, Katie Hogan;

    Biography

    Nancy L. Roth, Linda K. Fuller