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Livelihood Risk, Culture, and the HIV Interface: Evidence from Lakeshore Border Communities in Buliisa District, Uganda.

Livelihood Risk, Culture, and the HIV Interface: Evidence from Lakeshore Border Communities in Buliisa District, Uganda.

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dc.contributor.author Japheth Kwiringira
dc.contributor.author Paulino Ariho
dc.contributor.author Henry Zakumumpa
dc.contributor.author James Mugisha
dc.contributor.author Joseph Rujumba
dc.contributor.author Marion Mutabazi Mugisha
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.issn 16879686
dc.identifier.issn 16879694
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48994
dc.description.abstract Background. While studies have focused on HIV prevalence and incidence among fishing communities, there has been inadequate attention paid to the construction and perception of HIV risk among fisher folk. There has been limited research with respect to communities along Lake Albert on the border between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Methods. We conducted a qualitative study on three landing sites of Butiaba, Bugoigo, and Wanseko on the shores of Lake Albert along the border of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Data were collected using 12 Focus Group Discussions and 15 key informant interviews. Analysis was done manually using content and thematic approaches. Results. Lakeshore livelihoods split families between men, women, and children with varying degrees of exposure to HIV infection risk. Sustaining a thriving fish trade was dependent on taking high risks. For instance, profits were high when the lake was stormy. Landing sites were characterized by widespread prostitution, alcohol consumption, drug abuse, and child labour. Such behaviors negatively affected minors and in many ways predisposed them to HIV infection. The lake shore-border heterogeneity resulted in a population with varying HIV knowledge, attitudes, behavior, and competencies to risk perception and adaptation amidst negative masculinities and negative resilience. Conclusion. The susceptibility of lakeshore communities to HIV is attributable to a complex combination of geo-socio, the available (health) services, economic, and cultural factors which converged around the fishing livelihood. This study reveals that HIV risk assessment is an interplay of plural rationalities within the circumstances and constraints that impinge on the daily lives by different actors. A lack of cohesion in a multiethnic setting with large numbers of outsiders and a large transient population made the available HIV interventions less effective.
dc.publisher Hindawi Publishing Corporation
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of tropical medicine
dc.title Livelihood Risk, Culture, and the HIV Interface: Evidence from Lakeshore Border Communities in Buliisa District, Uganda.
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1155/2019/6496240
dc.identifier.pmid 31223313
dc.identifier.mag 2946682636
dc.identifier.pmc PMC6541934
dc.identifier.lens 013-370-235-196-846
dc.identifier.volume 2019
dc.identifier.spage 6496240
dc.identifier.epage 10
dc.subject.lens-fields Psychological resilience
dc.subject.lens-fields Risk perception
dc.subject.lens-fields Qualitative research
dc.subject.lens-fields Geography
dc.subject.lens-fields Thriving
dc.subject.lens-fields Child labour
dc.subject.lens-fields Population
dc.subject.lens-fields Livelihood
dc.subject.lens-fields Socioeconomics
dc.subject.lens-fields Focus group


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