Communication and the Decision Making Process among Couples with HIV/AIDS in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
Author(s) -
Vezumuzi Ndlovu
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
isrn infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2090-8725
DOI - 10.1155/2014/684864
Subject(s) - compromise , negotiation , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , fertility , decision making , psychology , social psychology , qualitative research , family planning , developmental psychology , medicine , demography , population , sociology , family medicine , business , marketing , research methodology , social science , purchasing
The study explores how HIV-positive couples negotiate and make reproductive and sexually related decisions. The broader aim of the paper is to understand how men and women with HIV make decisions about contraception and reproduction and what those decisions indicate about the realities of HIV-positive relationships. In line with the study’s aim to explore meanings related to the decision making process, a qualitative research approach was adopted. In-depth interviews were conducted with 15 couples in which at least one of them was HIV-positive. A critical interpretive analysis of the data was adopted in order to gain insight into decision making among the HIV-positive couples. The results indicate that decisions made were usually a result of negotiation and compromise between partners. However, women’s fertility and sexual preferences were found to be a major factor in determining the outcome of the decision making process. Couples who intended to have a child were found to be active decision makers while those who only desired or did not desire to have a child were mainly passive decision makers. The study concludes that women exercise significant power over contraceptive and reproductive decisions among both active and passive decision makers.
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