Consensus on addressing HIV-related stigma and achieving the societal enabler targets using an adapted Delphi process
Abstrak
Objectives To seek consensus among global experts on concepts, measures and approaches to guide national and global action to address HIV-related stigma and formulate a call to action. This outlines priorities to unite actors in more effectively responding to and resourcing efforts to address HIV-related stigma.Design An adapted Delphi consensus-building process using two rounds of online questionnaires.Setting Online questionnaires sent to a global expert panel.Participants 50 global experts on HIV-related stigma and discrimination representing sectors including civil society, people living with HIV and key populations, research and academia, clinical practice, law, non-profit organisations, the United Nations, and policy and donor organisations.Results The panel reached consensus on 55 points relating to the 12 broad themes extracted from the evidence base. These comprised the importance of addressing HIV-related stigma at scale; HIV-related stigma terms and definitions; Frameworks; Programming and approaches; Community leadership in HIV-related stigma-reduction implementation; Intersectional stigma and discrimination; Stigma and discrimination measures and assessment scales; Monitoring and evaluation; Stakeholder and community participation in monitoring and evaluation; Knowledge gaps and research needs; Funding and Commitment calls. From these, a consensus statement and call to action were formulated on priorities for strong political and financial commitments by all countries to reduce and mitigate HIV-related stigma and achieve global HIV targets adopted in 2021.Conclusions This study illustrated that global experts across sectors consider that action is needed to support the three critical enablers of the HIV response—society, systems and services—to ensure that HIV services are non-discriminatory and person-centred. The importance of attention and action to reduce stigma is critical in the current geopolitical and funding crisis affecting HIV and global health.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (9)
Stefan Baral
Adeeba Kamarulzaman
Lucy Stackpool-moore
Georgina Caswell
Laurel Sprague
Kate Molesworth
Sbongile Nkosi
Salvador Camacho
Simone Salem
Akses Cepat
PDF tidak tersedia langsung
Cek di sumber asli →- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-092516
- Akses
- Open Access ✓