Holding the line: family responses to pregnancy and the desire for a child in the context of HIV in Vietnam
Health services around the world offer many guidelines for HIV-positive
women who are pregnant or who want to become pregnant, and for women
with HIV infected partners. These guidelines are addressed to women and,
increasingly, also to men, but pay little or no attention to the role
of other members of the family in fertility decisions. This study looked
at factors influencing decisions about fertility in families with an
HIV-positive member. In Vietnam, the whole family takes a crucial role
in deciding whether a woman should become pregnant and whether she will
keep her child. This decision is taken in the context not only of the
close family but also under the influence of ancestors and the weight
given to them within the culture. Key in this regard is the need for
parents and grandparents to have male offspring. Health workers share
these ideas about preferred family composition and support men and women
in the quest for male offspring. Policies and guidelines should take
into account these additional family factors and goals as a basis for
the design of appropriate programmes to reduce HIV transmission.
Mời bạn xem tại đây: http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/30389
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