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Stigma and discrimination at school experienced by children and youngsters orphaned by AIDS

The restriction of human rights is one of the most poignant features of the AIDS epidemics. Children and youngsters infected or otherwise affected by AIDS are particularly vulnerable to stigma in educational environments. The purpose of this article is to analyze episodes of stigma and discrimination related to HIV/AIDS at school. Integrated to a demographic study, an in-depth analysis was made of seven interviews conducted with pedagogical coordinators from six public and private schools of early childhood and fundamental education in the city of São Paulo. The majority of episodes of stigma experienced by children and youngsters within schools took place in circumstances of dating/sexuality, conflict with schoolmates, learning difficulties, disclosure of orphanhood by AIDS, and interaction between teachers and pupils with HIV, with the most frequently mentioned causes being: being HIV-positive, coming from a "dysfunctional family", and inequality in gender roles, age, and social class. Homophobia and racism were pointed out as stigma reinforcements. Descriptions were made of institutional responses to the AIDS stigma and of practices of prevention against STDs/AIDS. The episodes indicate the extent to which the stigma and discrimination related to HIV/AIDS can aggravate the social inequality already present within the sphere of education, obstructing the youngsters' rights to education, to family life, to leisure, to privacy, to secrecy/confidentiality, and to a love life. Such episodes also reveal the lack of prevention programs in the schools visited, and the difficulty of dealing with other forms of stigma (such as racism and the stigma of poverty).

AIDS stigma; Right to Education; Orphans of AIDS


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