OFFICIAL CAMPAIGNS ON HIV/AIDS IN BRAZIL: DIVERGENCES BETWEEN CONTENTS AND EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PROFILE OF THE DISEASE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5380/ce.v26i0.70729Keywords:
HIV, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Gender, Health, Social Class, Nursing.Abstract
Objective: to analyze the categories of gender, social class, race/ethnicity and generation in the discourses of official mediatic campaigns on HIV/AIDS publicized in the period 1988 through 2018.
Method: exploratory and documental study, based on publications of publicized campaigns by the public site of the Chronicle Conditions and Sexually Transmissible Infections Department. We have found 55 campaigns whose central theme was that we are approaching, regarding the period 1998-2018. They were submitted to content analysis and processed by the software WebODA®.
Results: the category gender was prevalent in the campaigns (30,90%), followed by generation (25.46%), social class (12.72%), and race/ethnicity (1.81%).
Conclusion: It can be noticed that there is an HIV/AIDS dynamics that cannot be reverted by campaigns. It is necessary to continuously make such campaigns able to approach the phenomenon within the different communities that include hommosexuals, males, females, black people, indigenous people, youngsters, elder ones, and also using communication content for those groups, taking into account their ways of living.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Cogitare Enfermagem reserves the right to make normative, orthographic, and grammatical changes to the published article to maintain the cultured standard of the language, while respecting the authors' style.
The published study is the sole responsibility of the author(s), and Cogitare Enfermagem is exclusively responsible for evaluating the manuscript as a scientific publication vehicle. Revista Cogitare Enfermagem is not responsible for any violations of Law No. 9,610/1998, the Brazilian Copyright Law.
Cogitare Enfermagem allows the author to hold the copyright of articles accepted for publication, without restrictions.
The articles published are licensed under the Creative Commons license CC BY 4.0 Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0 International - CC BY 4.0 - The attribution adopted by Cogitare Enfermagem is permitted:
- Share - copy and redistribute the material in any media or format.
- Adapt - remix, transform and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
- Attribution - You must give proper credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes have been made. You may do this in any reasonable way, but not in a way that suggests that the licensor endorses it or approves of its use.
- No additional restrictions - You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing something that the license allows.




















