Abstract
Exposure to mass media related to HIV/AIDS has been linked to attitudinal and behavioral changes. This study aims to identify the source(s) of HIV information for the general Chinese population and examine their association with HIV transmission knowledge and stigmatizing attitude toward people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA).
A total of 3,716 market workers in Fuzhou, China, participated in a face-to-face survey. Multiple regression models were used to describe correlations among respondents’ HIV/STD information sources, HIV transmission knowledge, and stigmatizing attitude toward PLWHA.
Mass media sources, such as television programs, newspapers, and magazines, were more frequently identified as the channels for HIV information than interpersonal sources, such as friends and service providers. Exposure to multiple sources of HIV information (where at least one source is mass media) was significantly related to HIV knowledge and less stigmatizing attitude toward PLWHA.
Mass media in China has been a major source of HIV information to the public. Enhancing the content and penetration of HIV/AIDS campaigns within various channels of the media can be an important strategy in disseminating HIV knowledge and reducing HIV-related discrimination.
This study was funded by National Institute of Mental Health grant number U10MH61513, a five-country Cooperative Agreement being conducted in China, India, Peru, Russia, and Zimbabwe.
Notes
∗< 0.05; ∗∗< 0.01; ∗∗∗< 0.001.
∗< 0.05; ∗∗< 0.01; ∗∗∗< 0.001.