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Understanding diversity in impact and responses among HIV/AIDS-affected households: the case of Msinga, South Africa


Kees Swaans
Jacqueline Broerse
Irma Van Diepen
Monique Salomon
Diana Gibson
Joske Bunders

Abstract

To gain a more comprehensive understanding of the impact of HIV and AIDS on rural households in Msinga, South Africa, the sustainable livelihoods framework was adapted. An ethnographic perspective was employed to examine: 1) the impact of HIV/AIDS-related illnesses on people's mind and spirit (the internal environment), and 2) the influence of institutional structures and processes (the external environment), in order to better understand 3) the actions taken by individuals and households in response to HIV and AIDS. Members of three support groups at a local drop-in centre were consulted about the impact of HIV and AIDS on their lives through focus groups, a questionnaire and in-depth interviews. The study shows that the psychosocial impact and associated coping strategies, as well as prevailing gender-based power relations and exclusion from social-exchange networks — which are not (readily) available factors in the sustainable livelihoods framework — affect people's lives in different ways and depend on the specific situation of the individual or household concerned. The study confirms the need to restore a household's resource base and to address psychosocial issues. However, the variation in impact to different households requires a diversified and holistic programme of development interventions.

Keywords: accessibility; coping; mitigation strategies; psychosocial aspects; resource-poor settings; sustainable livelihoods framework

African Journal of AIDS Research 2008, 7(2): 167–178

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eISSN: 1608-5906
print ISSN: 1727-9445