The correlation between poverty and the increasing number of HIV/AIDS cases is striking in Saskatchewan’s urban centres. Recent research indicates that the current spike of HIV/AIDS cases in the province disproportionately affects young Aboriginal women who live in Saskatoon’s inner-city neighbourhoods. Because HIV/AIDS is both a pathological and social reality, this paper uses a syndemic approach to analyze coinfection, injection drug use, poverty, gender, and ethnicity/race as they pertain to the emerging HIV/AIDS epidemic in Saskatchewan. Taking into consideration Canada’s colonial history and ongoing neo-colonialism facing Aboriginal persons, this paper explores the relationship between health configurations and larger political and economic systems that result in structural violence.
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CITATION STYLE
Cessna, A. P. (2014). The Boom Province: A Syndemic Approach to the HIV/AIDS Explosion among Aboriginal Persons in Urban Saskatchewan. USURJ: University of Saskatchewan Undergraduate Research Journal, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.32396/usurj.v1i1.49