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"Stigma and Global Health: Developing a
Research Agenda"
an International Conference September 5-7, 2001
Bethesda, Maryland
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/aug2001/fic-30.htm
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,
Md. — A May 8, 2001, article in The New York Times discusses the
plight of miners with AIDS in Botswana. The article states, "Typically,
miners who are believed to be infected are shunned. They sit alone in
buses that carry workers to the pit. They eat alone in the company
kitchens because their colleagues are afraid to share utensils or
crockery with them." Although this article focuses on individuals with
one disease in one country of Africa, it could be describing the
isolation and humiliation that faces people with stigmatizing conditions
in many parts of the world.
To explore the relationship between stigma
and public health, examine the social and cultural determinants of
stigma, explore how stigma prevents people from seeking or getting
treatment for disease, and determine future research opportunities, the
Fogarty International Center (FIC), in partnership with other National
Institutes of Health (NIH) Institutes and Offices, U.S. agencies, and
domestic and international organizations (see list below), announces a
major international conference oriented toward developing a research
agenda that will lead to the mitigation of the impact of stigma on
individuals and societies. Such an agenda would be expected to include
activities designed not only to better understand stigma's social and
cultural determinants but also to identify and test ideas for effective
new behavioral interventions.
Stigma has been defined as a deeply
discrediting attribute that reduces a person to one who is in some way
tainted and can therefore be denigrated. It is a pervasive problem that
affects health globally, threatening an individual's psychological and
physical well-being. It prevents individuals from coming forward for
diagnosis and impairs their ability to access care or participate in
research studies designed to find solutions. Much attention has been
paid to the plight of the stigmatized, including those with AIDS or
suspected to have AIDS, those with leprosy, and those suffering from
mental health disorders. But stigma goes beyond these disorders to
include some health conditions that are no longer stigmatized in the
developed world but continue to have an impact in resource-poor
countries.
Action has been slow in coming. Little is
known about how pervasive the problem of stigma is in the developing
world and about how health care systems can work to tackle its negative
effects on individuals and societies.
"Stigma and Global Health: Developing a
Research Agenda," will be held at the Bethesda Marriott Hotel on
September 5-7, 2001. The Conference will bring together health
professionals, scientists and media and policy experts from around the
world, including more than 90 from the developing world, to summarize
current knowledge of stigma, identify existing gaps, and determine the
directions for social science and behavioral research to illuminate the
issues. It will focus on a small group of conditions, including
HIV/AIDS, epilepsy, mental health, alcohol and drug abuse, and physical
anomalies, but will otherwise be far ranging in scope. This conference
is especially notable because it is the first to address the
relationship of stigma to global health, including infectious and
non-infectious diseases and behavioral and physical conditions, rather
than only one category of disease, and because many of the participants
will be from the developing world, where stigmatized conditions
represent an enormous burden.
Discussions will address stigma both
domestically and internationally. Meeting topics include:
Definitions, Background, and History of Stigma
Examples of Health-Associated Stigma: AIDS,
Epilepsy, Schizophrenia, Physical Anomalies
Stigma and Public Health
Impact of the Media
Social Considerations
Background papers, final conference agenda,
a list of all speakers and moderators, and directions to the Bethesda
Marriott Hotel can be accessed at:
http://www.stigmaconference.nih.gov.
NOTE: The standard registration fee for
this conference is waived for members of the press. However, space is
limited so please RSVP and provide your press credentials when you
register for the conference by calling Jennifer Cabe or Irene Edwards at
the FIC Communications Office at 301-496-2075.
Conference Partners
NIH:
Fogarty International Center
National Cancer Institute
National Human Genome Research Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial
Research
National Institute of Mental Health
National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke
National Institute of Nursing Research
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Office of the Director: Office of AIDS
Research, Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, and
Office of Research on Women's Health
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Global Forum for Health Research
March of Dimes
National Science Foundation
Pan American Health Organization
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
World Health Organization
FIC is the international component of the
NIH. It promotes and supports scientific discovery internationally and
mobilizes resources to reduce disparities in global health. NIH is an
agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Press
releases, fact sheets, and other FIC-related materials are available at
http://www.nih.gov/fic