Breaking barriers: A qualitative study exploring the social and cultural factors that influence HIV awareness and uptake of HIV prevention among women of African and Caribbean heritage in England
Nicola Jones, Sarah Bekaert, Dianne Regisford, Nicole Jameelah Shodunke

TL;DR
This study explores how social and cultural factors affect HIV awareness and prevention uptake among women of African and Caribbean heritage in England.
Contribution
The paper introduces participatory insights into how lived experiences and stigma influence HIV prevention behaviors in a specific demographic.
Findings
Fear of HIV is rooted in past traumatic experiences and mistrust in healthcare services.
Low perception of HIV risk is influenced by stigmatizing beliefs and partner behavior.
Participatory focus groups effectively reduce stigma and increase HIV awareness.
Abstract
There have been impressive advancements made in preventing and treating HIV. However, the impacts have not been experienced equally across demographics in England. African born persons, in particular women of Black African ethnicity, continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV. HIV prevention campaigns have often overlooked social, cultural, and structural factors that shape access to HIV prevention. This paper explores how women of African and Caribbean heritage understand HIV within their social networks, and how they perceive HIV and sexual health services. This insight is needed to develop more inclusive and effective approaches to HIV prevention. This study adopted a participatory action research framework, acknowledging lived experience as a basis of knowledge. Focus groups and one-to-one interviews were used to collect qualitative data from a local community women’s…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Sex work and related issues
