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      Navigating HIV citizenship: identities, risks and biological citizenship in the treatment as prevention era

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          Abstract

          The use of HIV Treatment as Prevention (TasP) has radically changed our understandings of HIV risk and revolutionised global HIV prevention policy to focus on the use of pharmaceuticals. Yet, there has been little engagement with the very people expected to comply with a daily pharmaceutical regime. We employ the concept of HIV citizenship to explore responses by people living with HIV in the UK to TasP. We consider how a treatment-based public health strategy has the potential to reshape identities, self-governance and forms of citizenship, domains which play a critical role not only in compliance with new TasP policies, but in how HIV prevention, serodiscordant relationships and (sexual) health are negotiated and enacted. Our findings disrupt the biomedical narrative which claims an end to HIV through scaling up access to treatment. Responses to TasP were framed through shifting negotiations of identity, linked to biomarkers, cure and managing treatment. Toxicity of drugs – and bodies – were seen as something to manage and linked to the shifting possibilities in serodiscordant environments. Finally, a sense of being healthy and responsible, including appropriate use of resources, meant conflicting relationships with if and when to start treatment. Our research highlights how HIV citizenship in the TasP era is negotiated and influenced by intersectional experiences of community, health systems, illness and treatment. Our findings show that the complexities of HIV citizenship and ongoing inequalities, and their biopolitical implications, will intimately shape the implementation and sustainability of TasP.

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          Barriers and Facilitators to HIV Testing in Migrants in High-Income Countries: A Systematic Review.

          Migrants, particularly from low- and middle-income countries, are at a heightened risk of adverse HIV outcomes. HIV testing may improve these outcomes. We reviewed and synthesised studies into migrants and HIV testing (outcome variable), published between January 1997 and April 2014. Papers using quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods designs, and samples with adult (≥18 years) migrants from low- and middle-income countries in high-income countries were included in the paper. Of 3155 papers retrieved, 31 met the inclusion criteria and are included in the review. A large number of barriers and facilitators to HIV testing were identified across the individual, social and structural levels. A number of study design and methodological issues, however, inhibited a comprehensive synthesis. There is no doubt that addressing HIV testing in migrants in high-income countries is complex; however, it has important implications for individual, community and population health, and a strong, empirically based response is warranted.
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            Key factors in the acceptability of treatment as prevention (TasP) in Scotland: a qualitative study with communities affected by HIV

            Objectives There is a clear need to understand the factors that might prevent and/or facilitate the effective use of HIV treatment as prevention (TasP) at an individual level. This paper reports on findings from the first qualitative study in the UK exploring the acceptability of TasP among gay, bisexual and/or men who have sex with men (MSM) and migrant African communities in Scotland. Methods We conducted seven exploratory focus group discussions (FGDs) with convenience samples of MSM (five FGDs, n=22) and mixed-gender African (two FGDs, n=11) participants. Of these, three FGDs were conducted with HIV-positive MSM (n=14) and one FGD with HIV-positive Africans (n=8). We then conducted 34 in-depth interviews (IDIs) with a purposive sample of MSM (n=20) and Africans (n=14, women=10). Half were HIV-positive (MSM, n=10; African, n=7). FGD and IDI data were analysed thematically drawing on predetermined and emergent themes. Results We found that inequalities in HIV literacy could be a barrier to TasP, as could social constraints, such as criminalisation of transmission, increased risk of sexually transmitted infection and increased burden of treatment. We also identified psychological barriers such as perceptions of risk. However, relationships and shared decision making were identified as potential facilitators for TasP. Conclusions Our results suggest that potential use and management of TasP may not be straightforward. It could be contingent on reducing inequalities in HIV literacy, minimising the perceived burden of treatment and other potential risks, and addressing the dynamics of existing and socially acceptable risk management strategies, especially in relation to long-term serodiscordant relationships.
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              Non/infectious corporealities: tensions in the biomedical era of 'HIV normalisation'.

              In the contemporary HIV epidemic, antiretroviral treatments are increasingly considered so effective at viral suppression that they render people with HIV sexually non-infectious. With its radical implications for global HIV prevention, this emerging paradigm is invested with the potential to turn the epidemic around and to 'normalise' one of the most feared infectious diseases in history, thus echoing wider trends of 'biomedicalisation'. What remains unexamined is whether this paradigm shift will bring about a parallel shift in the embodied experiences of being HIV-positive. This article explores the nascent trajectory from infectious to non-infectious corporeality against the backdrop of the discursive history of HIV, with particular focus on the landmark Swiss Consensus Statement, and in the context of research with heterosexuals with HIV in Australia. In-depth interviews revealed that HIV corporeality was not a stable, homogenised experience across participants and time, nor did it simply follow medical discourses. Instead, HIV corporeality emerged as a contingent set of tensions between conflicting discourses of infectiousness that were negotiated and made sense of within situated and embodied life histories. These findings pose challenges to the imperative of HIV normalisation and the related tendency in HIV prevention to universalise the notion of 'infectiousness'. © 2012 The Author. Sociology of Health & Illness © 2012 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Health Risk Soc
                Health Risk Soc
                CHRS
                chrs20
                Health, Risk & Society
                Taylor & Francis
                1369-8575
                1469-8331
                2019
                31 January 2019
                : 21
                : 1-2
                : 1-16
                Affiliations
                [a ]Centre for Biomedicine, Self and Society, Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, UK
                [b ]School of Social Sciences, Monash University , Melbourne
                [c ]MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow , Glasgow, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. Email: ingrid.young@ 123456ed.ac.uk
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1242-5992
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4075-0466
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6239-5616
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7711-8723
                Article
                1572869
                10.1080/13698575.2019.1572869
                6494283
                31105468
                7ce51188-4c54-45cd-9456-624db5ade16a
                © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 27 February 2018
                : 17 January 2019
                Page count
                References: 48, Pages: 16
                Funding
                Funded by: Chief Scientist Office 10.13039/501100000589
                Award ID: SPHSU11
                Award ID: SPHSU12
                Funded by: Medical Research Council 10.13039/501100000265
                Award ID: MC_UU_12017/11
                Award ID: MC_UU_12017/12
                Award ID: MC_UU_12017/2
                Funded by: Wellcome Trust 10.13039/100004440
                Award ID: 207928/Z/17/Z
                Award ID: 209519/Z/17/Z
                This work was supported by the Chief Scientist Office [SPHSU11,SPHSU12]; Medical Research Council [MC_UU_12017/11,MC_UU_12017/12,MC_UU_12017/2].
                Categories
                Article

                hiv,treatment as prevention,biological citizenship,people living with hiv,gay men,african communities

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