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Culture, Health & Sexuality
An International Journal for Research, Intervention and Care
Volume 23, 2021 - Issue 11: Viral Times: Rethinking HIV and COVID-19
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Research Article

‘It’s history in the making all around us’: examining COVID-19 through the lenses of HIV and epidemic history

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Pages 1500-1515 | Received 12 Oct 2020, Accepted 18 May 2021, Published online: 13 Jul 2021
 

Abstract

Research increasingly considers how collective narratives/experiences of HIV influence understandings of and responses to COVID-19 among men who have sex with men and how these discussions articulate with the larger literature on the social significance of epidemics. Drawing on interviews with 30 men who have sex with men, as well as discussion of epidemics as dramaturgical events, this study aimed to determine how men living in the USA make sense of COVID-19 in the light of their collective knowledge and/or memories of the HIV pandemic. Participants experienced progressive revelations regarding COVID-19’s seriousness and constructed frameworks with which to manage the unpredictability of infection. Participants also believed that the initial public response to COVID-19 on the part of the US federal government, health officials and the scientific community, although inadequate, was stronger and more extensive than the response had been to HIV. As communities and the USA negotiated their pandemic responses, participants negotiated their own personal responses with incomplete, uncertain, dynamic and conflicting information. This study provides evidence regarding the social organisation of a contemporary pandemic and how individuals perceive and guard against risk, assign responsibility for virus transmission and acquisition, and navigate the threat of a potentially deadly infection.

Acknowledgements

We thank Robert Cserni and the men who participated in this study, without whom this research would not have been possible.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Funding

There is no funding to report for this study.

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