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Cross-national Consultations on Health and Learning
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The Health and Learning Knowledge Centre's Adult Working Group (AWG) conducted consultations to identify themes, gaps, and needs for adults living with HIV/AIDS.
Participants included adults living with HIV/AIDS and service providers from Edmonton, Montreal and Nova Scotia.
The report highlights the barriers faced by these individuals and provides some recommendations to increase awareness among key stakeholders: policy makers, health-care and service providers, the public in general, and target groups such as young people at risk.
The best resource for a person living with HIV/AIDS is another person living with HIV/AIDS.- COMMUNITY MEMBER,Nova Scotia
Participants included adults living with HIV/AIDS, service providers who work with adults affected by the disease and some AIDS activists. The Adult Working Group worked closely with the Canadian AIDS Society to identify potential hosts and locations for the consultations. As a result, the AWG partnered with HIV Edmonton, Northern AIDS Connection Society in Truro Nova Scotia, and Baj Mukhopadhyay, a local consultant from Montreal.
Consultations were held to gather information. In total, 39 community members and 17 service providers participated.
People need to look at HIV as a health issue. If AIDS had been discovered in a seniors' home, would the same kind of stigma exist?- COMMUNITY MEMBER, Edmonton, Alberta
The main barriers to good health
The most common barriers to accessing information about HIV/AIDS
Key barriers to accessing health-care services
Overall, people living with HIV/AIDS say they are getting excellent service from AIDS service organizations, HIV specialists and some doctors.
Supporting research by funding
These consultations were conducted by the following members of the Health and Learning Knowledge Centre's Adult Working Group and their partners:
The Health and Learning Knowledge Centre is composed of a 17-member consortium led by the Faculty of Education at the University of Victoria. The centre brings together a wide variety of professional health and learning individuals and organizations based in British Columbia, Yukon and across Canada.
The AWG focuses on four priority groups: adults with low-literacy levels, immigrants and refugees, adults living with HIV/AIDS, and adults living in rural and remote communities.
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