Education and HIV/AIDS-30 years on.

Peter Aggleton, Ekua Yankah, Mary Crewe
Author Information
  1. Peter Aggleton: School of Education and Social Work, University of Sussex, United Kingdom. p.aggleton@sussex.ac.uk

Abstract

Education has long been identified as having a key role to play in reducing HIV-related risk and vulnerability, and in mitigating the impact of the epidemic on affected individuals and communities. This article reflects on progress over a 30-year period with respect to older and more emergent forms of education concerning HIV and AIDS: treatment education, education for HIV prevention, and education to encourage a positive and supportive community response. It points to a number of priorities for the future. These include analyzing more carefully different forms of HIV-related education, their consequences and effects, and identifying the specific effectivity of education in general and HIV-related education in particular in achieving positive outcomes. The potential of education to enable new ways of seeing, understanding, and hoping is stressed, as is the need to support education processes and systems that "think" faster than the epidemic.

MeSH Term

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
HIV Infections
Health Education
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Humans

Word Cloud

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