Violence prevention among HIV-positive women with histories of violence: healing women in their communities.

Journal: Women's Health Issues : Official Publication Of The Jacobs Institute Of Women's Health
Published:
Abstract

Experiences of past and current gender-based violence are common among HIV-positive women in the United States, who are predominantly from ethnic minority groups. However, culturally congruent, feasible interventions for HIV-positive women who have experienced past and/or current violence are not widely available. The Office on Women's Health Gender Forum has made several recommendations for responding to the National HIV/AIDS Strategy Implementation Plan, including recommendations to incorporate gender-based violence prevention into a comprehensive, gender-responsive national strategy. This paper draws on an example of a community-based project for HIV-positive women, the Healing Our Women Project, to illustrate how violence prevention can be achieved within peer-led and community-based programming. Strong community partnerships, responsiveness to community needs and local cultural norms, a trained workforce, and culturally competent care are programmatic cornerstones of gender-responsive services. HIV-positive women with histories of gender-based violence and risk factors for current and future violence deserve the highest quality gender-responsive services to ensure that they can address their health needs within contexts of safety and respect.

Authors
Gail Wyatt, Alison Hamilton, Hector Myers, Jodie Ullman, Dorothy Chin, Lekeisha Sumner, Tamra Loeb, Jennifer Carmona, Muyu Zhang, Honghu Liu