Awareness and Attitudes About HIV Among Pregnant Women in Aksu, Northwest China

  • Maimaiti R
  • Andersson R
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Abstract

The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region has a firmly established HIV epidemic among its intravenous drug user (IDU) population. Local sex workers were also found to be positive in 1998. A descriptive, cross-sectional survey of knowledge about HIV/AIDS and attitudes among consecutively selected pregnant women was conducted November 2005 in Aksu Prefecture, north-western China, with a population on 2 million with about 25 000 pregnancies per year. A total of 291 pregnant women participated. We found a limited knowledge on mother-to child transmission with several misconceptions. The AIDS campaigns have been successful in making all the women aware of HIV as a sexually transmitted disease. However, the common belief that social contact causes transmission gives a high risk that patients are stigmatized. Obviously, it is important to design HIV information strategies that target pregnant women in north-western China.

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APA

Maimaiti, R., & Andersson, R. (2008). Awareness and Attitudes About HIV Among Pregnant Women in Aksu, Northwest China. The Open AIDS Journal, 2(1), 72–77. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874613600802010072

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